Probing For Antagonism, Additivity and Synergy in Virus-Drought and Virus-Virus Relations

Prof. Victor Sadras1

1South Australian R&d Institute,

Biography:

Victor Sadras leads the Crop Ecophysiology team at the South Australia R&D Institute. He is interested in the adaptation of crops to environmental stresses, including water deficit, extreme temperatures, nutrient deficit, soil physical and chemical constraints, pathogens, and insects. He has developed theory, measured, and modelled aspects of the water, carbon, and nitrogen economies of annual and perennial crops in rain-fed and irrigated systems of Australia, Argentina, and China. He is the co-editor of Crop physiology: applications for breeding and agronomy (Academic Press) and has published 280 papers in peer-reviewed journals returning 21,800 citations and h = 86 (Google Scholar).

Victor Sadras, Maria Guirao, Aránzazu Moreno, Alberto Fereres

Abstract:

Inter-virus relationships in mixed infections and virus-drought relationships are agronomically important. We sampled published factorial experiments to probe for these relationships against the null hypothesis of additivity. Our sample captured antagonistic, additive, and synergistic inter-virus relationships in double infections. Virus-drought relationships in our sample were additive or antagonistic, reinforcing the notion that viruses have neutral or positive effects on droughted plants, or that drought enhances plant tolerance to viruses. Both inter-virus and virus-drought relationships vary with virus species, host plant to the level of cultivar or accession, timing of infection, plant age and trait, and growing conditions. The trait-dependence of these relationships has implications for resource allocation in plants. Owing to lagging theories, more experimental research in these fields is bound to return phenomenological outcomes. Theoretical work can advance in two complementary directions. First, effective theory that models the behaviour of the system without specifying all the underlying causes that lead to system state change. Second, mechanistic theory based on a nuanced view of the plant phenotype that explicitly considers downward causation; the influence of the plant phenotype on inter-virus relations and vice versa; the impact of timing, intensity and duration of drought interacting with viruses to modulate the plant phenotype; and both the soil (moisture) and atmospheric (vapour pressure deficit) aspects of drought. Theories should scale in time, from short term to full growing season, and in levels of organisation up to the relevant traits: crop yield in agriculture and fitness in nature.