Integrated virus and infection risk: does the banana streak virus (bsv) threat the banana culture? [Poster-P242]

2018 
Cultivated bananas mainly stem from intra- and interspecific crosses between two species: Musa acuminata (A genome) and Musa balbisiana (B genome). The B genome harbors viral sequences of Banana streak virus (BSV), inducing the banana streak disease and affecting growth and fruits production. The plantain is a natural hybrid (AAB) containing these integrations. BSV integrations can release functional virus following stresses, leading to spontaneous infections. However, no epidemic has been reported so far. We suspect the plantain to control this viral infection using a RNA silencing mechanism, resulting from the co-evolution between viral integrations and B genome. My PhD work aims to investigate BSV infections in plantain, from eBSV activation to complete recovery (qPCR, immunolabelling); as well as the defense mechanism set up by the host (Northern blot, NGS, in situ hybridization). I aim to propose a BSV infection evolution profile in plantain, to further test the virus transmission to a healthy plant. Indeed, other banana trees among which Cavendish cultivar (AAA, producing “dessert bananas”), without B genome, are extremely susceptible to BSV. The plantain culture intensification, associated with global changes, could threat the dessert bananas culture. My project will help answering this arising question of BSV epidemic risk.
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