Article (Scientific journals)
Flexible Spandrels of the Global Plant Virome: Proteomic-Wide Evolutionary Patterns of Structural Intrinsic Protein Disorder Elucidate Modulation at the Functional Virus-Host Interplay
Tahzima, Rachid; Haegemans, Annelies; Massart, Sébastien et al.
2021In Progress in Molecular Biology and Translational Science, Volume 183 (Part C)
Peer reviewed
 

Files


Full Text
Tahzimaetal2021 GlobalPlantViromeStructuralBiology.pdf
Author postprint (340.05 kB)
Invited Book Chapter
Download

All documents in ORBi are protected by a user license.

Send to



Details



Keywords :
Virus Structural Evolution, Viral Funcional Modularity,; Plant Virus Proteomics, Plant Virus Transmission, Global Plant Virome,; intrinsically disordered protein (IDP/IDR), Molecular Recognition and Binding Features (MoRF), Virus-Vector Protein-Protein Interaction,
Abstract :
[en] Intrinsically disordered proteins and regions (IDPs/IDRs) make up a large part of viral proteomes, but their real prevalence across the global plant virome are still poorly understood, partly because of their massive diversity. Here we propose an evolutionary quantitative proteomic approach to foray into genomic signatures that are preserved in the amino acid sequences of orthologous IDRs. Markedly, we found that relatively abundant IDP varies substantially between viral species and within plant virus families, including according to genome size, partition or replication strategies. We also demonstrate that most encoded proteomic modules of the plant virome contain multiple disordered features that are phylogenomically preserved, and can be correlated to genomic, bio-physical and evolutionary strategies. Furthermore, our focused interactome-wide analysis highlights lines of evidence indicating that various IDPs with similar evolutionary signatures modulate viral multifunctionality. Moreover, estimated fractions of IDR in the vicinity of pivotal evolutionary structural signatures embedded in interaction modules are strongly enriched with affinity binding functional annotations and relate to vector-borne virus transmission modes. Importantly, Molecular Recognition Features (MoRFs) are abundantly widespread in IDRs of viral modules and their binding partners. Finally, we propose a coarse-grained conceptual framework in which evolutionary proteome-wide IDP/IDRs patterns can be, rather, reliably exploited to elucidate their foundational fine-tuning role in plant virus transmission mechanisms. While opening unexplored avenues for consistently predicting virus-host functions for many new or uncharacterized plant viruses based on their proteomic repertoire, other considerations advocating further structural IDP research in Plant Virology are thoroughly discussed in light of viral evolution.
Disciplines :
Phytobiology (plant sciences, forestry, mycology...)
Author, co-author :
Tahzima, Rachid ;  Université de Liège - ULiège > Terra
Haegemans, Annelies;  ILVO > P96
Massart, Sébastien  ;  Université de Liège - ULiège > Département GxABT > Gestion durable des bio-agresseurs
Hebrard, Eugenie;  PHIM, Plant Health Institute, IRD, Cirad, Université de Montpellier > INRAE, Institut Agro
Language :
English
Title :
Flexible Spandrels of the Global Plant Virome: Proteomic-Wide Evolutionary Patterns of Structural Intrinsic Protein Disorder Elucidate Modulation at the Functional Virus-Host Interplay
Publication date :
November 2021
Journal title :
Progress in Molecular Biology and Translational Science
ISSN :
1877-1173
eISSN :
1878-0814
Publisher :
Elsevier, Amsterdam, Netherlands
Special issue title :
Dancing protein clouds: Intrinsically disordered proteins in the norm and pathology
Volume :
Volume 183
Issue :
Part C
Peer reviewed :
Peer reviewed
Commentary :
Invited Book Chapter
Available on ORBi :
since 20 June 2021

Statistics


Number of views
88 (7 by ULiège)
Number of downloads
151 (9 by ULiège)

Scopus citations®
 
2
Scopus citations®
without self-citations
1
OpenCitations
 
0

Bibliography


Similar publications



Contact ORBi