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Tomato yellow leaf curl Sardinia virus rep-derived resistance to homologous and heterologous geminiviruses occurs by different mechanisms and is overcome if virus-mediated transgene silencing is activated

TitleTomato yellow leaf curl Sardinia virus rep-derived resistance to homologous and heterologous geminiviruses occurs by different mechanisms and is overcome if virus-mediated transgene silencing is activated
Publication TypeArticolo su Rivista peer-reviewed
Year of Publication2003
AuthorsLucioli, Alessandra, Noris Emanuela, Brunetti A., Tavazza Raffaela, Ruzza V., Castillo A.G., Bejarano E.R., Accotto Gian Paolo, and Tavazza Mario
JournalJournal of Virology
Volume77
Pagination6785 - 6798
Date Published2003///
Abstract

The replication-associated protein (Rep) of geminiviruses is involved in several biological processes brought about by the presence of distinct functional domains. Recently, we have exploited the multifunctional character of the Tomato yellow leaf curl Sardinia virus (TYLCSV) Rep to develop a molecular interference strategy to impair TYLCSV infection. We showed that transgenic expression of its N-terminal 210 amino acids (Rep-210) confers resistance to the homologous virus by inhibiting viral transcription and replication. We have now used bio-chemical and transgenic approaches to carry out a fuller investigation of the molecular resistance mechanisms in transgenic plants expressing Rep-210. We show that Rep-210 confers resistance through two distinct molecular mechanisms, depending on the challenging virus. Resistance to the homologous virus is achieved by the ability of Rep-210 to tightly inhibit C1 gene transcription, while that to heterologous virus is due to the interacting property of the Rep-210 oligomerization domain. Furthermore, we present evidence that in Rep-210-expressing plants, the duration of resistance is related to the ability of the challenging virus to shut off transgene expression by a posttranscriptional homology-dependent gene silencing mechanism. A model of Rep-210-mediated geminivirus resistance that takes transgene- and virus-mediated mechanisms into account is proposed.

Notes

Cited By (since 1996): 39Export Date: 25 August 2010Source: Scopus

URLhttp://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?eid=2-s2.0-0037942759&partnerID=40&md5=e50d6799d17064be3b91069735d29839
Citation Key285