Molecular Plant-Microbe Interactions (Sep 2014)

Genetic Analyses of the FRNK Motif Function of Turnip mosaic virus Uncover Multiple and Potentially Interactive Pathways of Cross-Protection

  • Yi-Jung Kung,
  • Pin-Chun Lin,
  • Shyi-Dong Yeh,
  • Syuan-Fei Hong,
  • Nam-Hai Chua,
  • Li-Yu Liu,
  • Chan-Pin Lin,
  • Yu-Hsin Huang,
  • Hui-Wen Wu,
  • Chin-Chih Chen,
  • Shih-Shun Lin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1094/MPMI-04-14-0116-R
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 27, no. 9
pp. 944 – 955

Abstract

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Cross-protection triggered by a mild strain of virus acts as a prophylaxis to prevent subsequent infections by related viruses in plants; however, the underling mechanisms are not fully understood. Through mutagenesis, we isolated a mutant strain of Turnip mosaic virus (TuMV), named Tu-GK, that contains an Arg182Lys substitution in helper component-proteinase (HC-ProK) that confers complete cross-protection against infection by a severe strain of TuMV in Nicotiana benthamiana, Arabidopsis thaliana Col-0, and the Arabidopsis dcl2-4/dcl4-1 double mutant defective in DICER-like ribonuclease (DCL)2/DCL4-mediated silencing. Our analyses showed that HC-ProK loses the ability to interfere with microRNA pathways, although it retains a partial capability for RNA silencing suppression triggered by DCL. We further showed that Tu-GK infection triggers strong salicylic acid (SA)-dependent and SA-independent innate immunity responses. Our data suggest that DCL2/4-dependent and –independent RNA silencing pathways are involved, and may crosstalk with basal innate immunity pathways, in host defense and in cross-protection.