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Structural and genetic requirements for the biogenesis of Tobacco Rattle Virus-derived small interfering RNAs

Authors :
Donaire, Livia
Barajas, Daniel
Martínez-García, Belén
Martínez-Priego, Llucia
Pagán, Israel
Llave, César
Source :
Digital.CSIC. Repositorio Institucional del CSIC, instname
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
American Society for Microbiology, 2008.

Abstract

11 páginas, 5 figuras -- PAGS nros. 5167-5177<br />In plants, small RNA-guided processes referred to as RNA silencing control gene expression and serve as an efficient antiviral mechanism. Plant viruses are inducers and targets of RNA silencing as infection involves the production of functional virus-derived small interfering RNAs (siRNAs). Here we investigate the structural and genetic components influencing the formation of Tobacco rattle virus (TRV)-derived siRNAs. TRV siRNAs are mostly 21 nucleotides in length and derive from positive and negative viral RNA strands, although TRV siRNAs of positive polarity are significantly more abundant. This asymmetry appears not to correlate with the presence of highly structured regions of single-stranded viral RNA. The Dicer-like enzyme DCL4, DCL3, or DCL2 targets, alone or in combination, viral templates to promote synthesis of siRNAs of both polarities from all regions of the viral genome. The heterogeneous distribution profile of TRV siRNAs reveals differential contributions throughout the TRV genome to siRNA formation. Indirect evidence suggests that DCL2 is responsible for production of a subset of siRNAs derived from the 3′ end region of TRV. TRV siRNA biogenesis and antiviral silencing are strongly dependent on the combined activity of the host-encoded RNA-dependent RNA polymerases RDR1, RDR2, and RDR6, thus providing evidence that perfectly complementary double-stranded RNA serves as a substrate for siRNA production. We conclude that the overall composition of viral siRNAs in TRV-infected plants reflects the combined action of several interconnected pathways involving different DCL and RDR activities<br />This work was supported by grants GEN2003-20222-C02-01 and BIO2006-13107 from the M.E.C. (Spain) and GR/SAL/0821/2004 from the C.A.M. (Spain). L.D. was the recipient of a predoctoral fellowship from the C.A.M.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Digital.CSIC. Repositorio Institucional del CSIC, instname
Accession number :
edsair.dedup.wf.001..b3c579fed68685d04f2ed3005f5c5812