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J Gen Virol 88 (2007), 2337-2346; DOI 10.1099/vir.0.82928-0

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Potyvirus-induced gene silencing: the dynamic process of systemic silencing and silencing suppression

Elin Gammelgård1, Maradumane Mohan1,{dagger} and Jari P. T. Valkonen1,2

1 Department of Plant Biology and Forest Genetics, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU), PO Box 7080, SE-750 07 Uppsala, Sweden
2 Department of Applied Biology, PO Box 27, FIN-00014 University of Helsinki, Finland

Correspondence
Jari P. T. Valkonen
jari.valkonen{at}helsinki.fi

Potato virus A (PVA; genus Potyvirus) was used for virus-induced gene silencing in a model system that included transgenic Nicotiana benthamiana (line 16c) expressing the gfp transgene for green fluorescent protein (GFP) and chimeric PVA (PVA–GFP) carrying gfp in the P1-encoding region. Infection of the 16c plants with PVA–GFP in five experiments resulted in a reproducible pattern of systemic gfp transgene silencing, despite the presence of the strong silencing-suppressor protein, HC-Pro, produced by the virus. PVA–GFP was also targeted by silencing, and virus-specific short interfering RNA accumulated from the length of the viral genome. Viral deletion mutants lacking the gfp insert appeared in systemically infected leaves and reversed silencing of the gfp transgene in limited areas. However, systemic gfp silencing continued in newly emerging leaves in the absence of the gfp-carrying virus, which implicated a systemic silencing signal that moved from lower leaves without interference by HC-Pro. Use of GFP as a visual marker revealed a novel, mosaic-like recovery phenotype in the top leaves. The leaf areas appearing red or purple under UV light (no GFP expression) contained little PVA and gfp mRNA, and corresponded to the dark-green islands observed under visible light. The surrounding green fluorescent tissues contained actively replicating viral deletion mutants that suppressed GFP silencing. Taken together, systemic progression of gene silencing and antiviral defence (RNA silencing) and circumvention of the silencing by the virus could be visualized and analysed in a novel manner.

{dagger}Present address: Institute of Pathology, Case Western Reserve University, 2085, Adelbert Road, Cleveland, OH 44106, USA.




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K. Hirai, K. Kubota, T. Mochizuki, S. Tsuda, and T. Meshi
Antiviral RNA Silencing Is Restricted to the Marginal Region of the Dark Green Tissue in the Mosaic Leaves of Tomato Mosaic Virus-Infected Tobacco Plants
J. Virol., April 1, 2008; 82(7): 3250 - 3260.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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