Molecular Plant-Microbe Interactions (Mar 2000)

Virus Recovery Is Induced in Brome mosaic virus p2 Transgenic Plants Showing Synchronous Complementation and RNA-2-Specific Silencing

  • Lakshminarayan M. Iyer,
  • Timothy C. Hall

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1094/MPMI.2000.13.3.247
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 3
pp. 247 – 258

Abstract

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Nicotiana benthamiana plants expressing Brome mosaic virus (BMV) p2 protein complemented replication of RNAs1+3 but, surprisingly, supported little or no replication of RNA-2. Despite this, the p2 transgenic plants were able to support systemic migration of RNAs-1 and -3. Kinetic analyses showed identical degradation rates for RNAs-2 and -3, greatly detracting from the concept of an induction of an RNA-2-specific degradation system. Deletion analysis identified a 200-nucleotide sequence that may contribute to silencing in a context-specific manner. When (R)1 progeny of a severely silencing p2 transgenic line were tested for virus resistance, three different classes of reactions were observed. In class 1 and class 3 plants, the virus moved systemically and showed various extents of RNA-2 silencing. However, in class 2 plants, there was a stochastic onset of post-transcriptional silencing in the systemic leaves that was reminiscent of virus recovery. Plants showing recovery tended to have a greater number of transgene loci than did those exhibiting componentspecific silencing. The induction of silencing did not appear to be dependent solely on the combined steady state levels of the transgene and viral RNA. Some plants transformed with a p2 frameshift construct showed a complete silencing phenotype, but none showed RNA-2-specific silencing. While the relationship between the two types of silencing remains unclear, we speculate that our observations reflect early events in the induction of virus recovery.

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