The intestine is a site of passage for potato leafroll virus from the gut lumen into the haemocoel in the aphid vector, Myzus persicae Sulz.
Journal: 1993/September - Archives of Virology
ISSN: 0304-8608
PUBMED: 8347080
Abstract:
Four detection techniques, three of which gave reliable identification of the virus particles, were used to locate potato leafroll virus (PLRV) in the alimentary canal of its main aphid vector, Myzus persicae Sulz: immunofluorescence on cryostat sections, conventional transmission electron microscopy on ultrathin sections and immune electron microscopy with gold labeling, either prior to or after fixation-embedding. Each method clearly showed the presence of the virus in the intestine epithelium and its absence in cells of the other parts of the alimentary canal. Under the experimental conditions used, the intestinal cells seemed to be the pathway for PLRV transport from the gut lumen into the haemocoel. Electron microscopy examinations showed many virus particles close to the apical plasmalemma of the epithelial cells in the gut lumen of the intestine. Other particles were seen in shallow pit-like regions or surrounded by coated vesicles in the apical part of these cells. Thus the virus particles seemed to enter the epithelial cells of the intestine by a mechanism of endocytosis. In the cytoplasm of these cells, virions were also frequently observed in isolated--or more often aggregated--tubular vesicles. The latter could be involved in PLRV transport through the cell since they were observed fusing with different cell organelles. A few viral particles were also detected in lysosomes as well as in multivesicular bodies. Virus particles were observed between the plasmalemma and basal lamina of the intestine cells but not in the haemocoel, where probably they were quickly dispersed. Our results are discussed in relation to other reports which have shown hindgut and stomach as sites of passage from the gut lumen into the aphid's body cavity for PLRV and other circulative viruses.
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