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J Gen Virol 72 (1991), 1787-1792; DOI 10.1099/0022-1317-72-8-1787
© 1991 Society for General Microbiology

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Artificial Defective Interfering RNAs Derived from Brome Mosaic Virus

Loren E. Marsh, Gregory P. Pogue, James P. Connell and Timothy C. Hall

Department of Biology, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas 77843-3258, U.S.A.

Naturally occurring defective interfering RNAs (DI-RNAs) greatly reduce the accumulation of their helper virus in vivo, but are rarely associated with plant positive-strand RNA viruses. Deletion mutants pRNA-2 M/S and pRNA-2 E/S, derived from brome mosaic virus (BMV) genomic RNA-2, replicated in a manner dependent on BMV RNA-1 and -2, and effectively interfered with their accumulation in barley protoplasts. Based on their mode of replication, these mutant RNAs have been termed parasitic RNAs (pRNAs). When present with RNA-1 and -2 at low inoculum amounts, pRNA-2 M/S and pRNA-2 E/S reduced the level of replication of RNA-2, the parental RNA, by 37% and 64%, respectively. Greater amounts of pRNA in the inoculum completely eliminated the replication of both RNA-1 and -2. Mutations that prevented translation of truncated proteins from the pRNAs did not affect interference, but those that reduced pRNA replication decreased their ability to interfere with genomic RNA replication. At a molar pRNA: genomic RNA inoculum ratio of 1.5:1, pRNA-2 E/S reduced the accumulation of all helper virus RNAs by > 60%. This occurred in the presence of wild-type RNA-3 or {Delta}SGP RNA-3, a deletion mutant of RNA-3 that lacks the subgenomic promoter necessary for coat protein expression, demonstrating that the interference mediated by the pRNAs was not effected by encapsidation. These data indicate that the expression of pRNAs that function as artificial DI-RNAs in transgenic plants may be an approach for inducing resistance to virus infection which is applicable to a wide range of plant viruses.

Received 18 February 1991; accepted 23 April 1991.


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