Phosphorylation of tobacco mosaic virus movement protein abolishes its translation repressing ability

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Abstract

Previously we showed that the ribonucleoprotein complexes (RNPs) of the TMV 30-kDa movement protein (MP) with TMV RNA are nontranslatable in vitro and noninfectious to protoplasts, but are infectious to intact plants. It has been suggested that MP-TMV RNA complexes could be converted into the translatable and replicatable form in planta in the course of passage through plasmodesmata (Karpova et al., 1997, Virology 230, 11-21). The role of TMV MP phosphorylation was investigated in terms of its capacity to modulate the translation-repressing ability of the MR Phosphorylation of the TMV MP. either before or after RNP complex formation, caused a conversion of nontranslatable MP-RNA complexes into a form that was translatable in vitro and infectious to protoplasts and plants.

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Karpova, O. V., Rodionova, N. P., Ivanov, K. I., Kozlovsky, S. V., Dorokhov, Y. L., & Atabekov, J. G. (1999). Phosphorylation of tobacco mosaic virus movement protein abolishes its translation repressing ability. Virology, 261(1), 20–24. https://doi.org/10.1006/viro.1999.9842

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