Immunity to tomato yellow leaf curl virus in transgenic tomato is associated with accumulation of transgene small RNA

被引:0
|
作者
Diana Leibman
Shanmugam Prakash
Dalia Wolf
Aaron Zelcer
Ghandi Anfoka
Sabrina Haviv
Marina Brumin
Victor Gaba
Tzahi Arazi
Moshe Lapidot
Amit Gal-On
机构
[1] ARO,Department of Plant Pathology and Weed Science
[2] Volcani Center,Department of Vegetable Research
[3] ARO,Department of Ornamental Horticulture
[4] Volcani Center,Department of Biotechnology
[5] ARO,undefined
[6] Volcani Center,undefined
[7] Al-Balqa’ Applied University,undefined
来源
Archives of Virology | 2015年 / 160卷
关键词
Cetyl Trimethyl Ammonium Bromide; Tomato Yellow Leaf Curl Virus; Tomato Yellow Leaf; Disease Severity Index; Graft Union;
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Gene silencing is a natural defense response of plants against invading RNA and DNA viruses. The RNA post-transcriptional silencing system has been commonly utilized to generate transgenic crop plants that are “immune” to plant virus infection. Here, we applied this approach against the devastating DNA virus tomato yellow leaf curl virus (TYLCV) in its host tomato (Solanum lycopersicum L.). To generate broad resistance to a number of different TYLCV viruses, three conserved sequences (the intergenic region [NCR], V1-V2 and C1-C2 genes) from the genome of the severe virus (TYLCV) were synthesized as a single insert and cloned into a hairpin configuration in a binary vector, which was used to transform TYLCV-susceptible tomato plants. Eight of 28 independent transgenic tomato lines exhibited immunity to TYLCV-Is and to TYLCV-Mld, but not to tomato yellow leaf curl Sardinia virus, which shares relatively low sequence homology with the transgene. In addition, a marker-free (nptII-deleted) transgenic tomato line was generated for the first time by Agrobacterium-mediated transformation without antibiotic selection, followed by screening of 1180 regenerated shoots by whitefly-mediated TYLCV inoculation. Resistant lines showed a high level of transgene-siRNA (t-siRNA) accumulation (22 % of total small RNA) with dominant sizes of 21 nt (73 %) and 22 nt (22 %). The t-siRNA displayed hot-spot distribution (“peaks”) along the transgene, with different distribution patterns than the viral-siRNA peaks observed in TYLCV-infected tomato. A grafting experiment demonstrated the mobility of 0.04 % of the t-siRNA from transgenic rootstock to non-transformed scion, even though scion resistance against TYLCV was not achieved.
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页码:2727 / 2739
页数:12
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