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Changes in the translational landscape during red clover necrotic mosaic virus infection

Preprint Created on 22 Jun 2026 bioRxiv

Viruses alter host gene expression to create a proviral environment while the host simultaneously regulates gene expression to restrict the virus spread. Owing to RNA virus complete reliance on the host translational machinery, it is important to assess the translational control during virus infection. Therefore, we used ribosome profiling (ribo-seq) paired with RNAseq to observe how red clover necrotic mosaic virus (RCNMV) infection of Arabidopsis plants alters cellular gene expression at the levels of mRNA abundance and translation efficiency. We determined that at 5 days post-inoculation (dpi), the translational response to RCNMV infection is enriched in genes of the innate immune system. Expression of a tumor necrosis factor receptor-associated factor (TRAF)-like protein, a regulator of development and immune response, was translationally but not transcriptionally upregulated early in systemic infection. By 8 dpi, many pathways were regulated/dysregulated, and unfolded protein response (UPR) genes were transcriptionally upregulated but with reduced translation efficiency. Ribosome profiling of RCNMV RNAs revealed (i) -1 programmed ribosomal frameshifting at 7.5-8.0%, the first direct measurement of frameshift efficiency in infected cells for any plant virus; (ii) that coat protein is translated at extremely high efficiency, while the RNA-dependent RNA polymerase is translated least efficiently, and (iii) an unexpected extremely strong ribosomal pause site in the open reading frame that encodes the movement protein. To our knowledge, this is the first genome-wide study that assesses the translational control of gene expression in plants infected with a virus from the large and diverse Tombusviridae family.

Kanodia, P., Lozier, Z., Lastovka, F., Walker, D. C., Liu, P., Chung, B. Y., Miller, W. A.

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