Latent infection of Vigna unguiculata with seed-borne bean common mosaic virus modulates plant growth and may contribute to mutualistic symbiosis between the virus and host plant
Hideki Takahashi, Nan Xu, Yoshinori Kanayama, Midori Tabara, Atsushi Takeda, Toshiyuki Fukuhara, Shuhei Miyashita

TL;DR
A virus infects cowpea plants without causing severe symptoms, subtly altering plant growth and possibly forming a beneficial relationship with the host.
Contribution
The study reveals a mutualistic symbiosis between a latent virus and cowpea, affecting plant growth and lifespan.
Findings
Latent BCMV(Vu06) infection in cowpea cultivar #6 delays flowering and increases lifespan.
Infected plants show no significant differences in dry matter weight or seed germination.
The virus may form a mutualistic relationship with the host, enhancing plant survivability.
Abstract
In evaluating the germination and growth of the seed resources of 322 cultivars of cowpea (Vigna unguiculata), we found the development of yellow symptoms on ~50% of the cotyledons of 10 cultivars. RNA-Seq analysis of total RNA extracted from symptomatic cotyledons indicated that the 10 cultivars were infected with the bean common mosaic virus (Potyvirus phaseovulgaris, BCMV), which is a member of the family Potyviridae and able to seed-transmit to progeny plants. One of the BCMV isolates identified in the 10 cultivars was BCMV(Vu06), which was infected with cultivar #6. During the growth of BCMV(Vu06)-infected cowpea plants, there were no systemic symptoms in newly developing leaves, but the virus coat protein was detected in both leaves and flowers. Thus, the cowpea cultivar #6 plant was latently infected with BCMV(Vu06). There was no significant difference in the dry matter weight of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPlant Virus Research Studies · Legume Nitrogen Fixing Symbiosis · Plant Parasitism and Resistance
