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Tobacco mosaic virus movement protein enhances the spread of RNA silencing
Authors:Vogler Hannes  Kwon Myoung-Ok  Dang Vy  Sambade Adrian  Fasler Monika  Ashby Jamie  Heinlein Manfred
Institution:1Department of Plant Physiology, Botanical Institute, University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland;2Friedrich Miescher Institute for Biomedical Research, Basel, Switzerland;3Institut Biologie Moléculaire des Plantes, Laboratoire propre du CNRS (UPR 2357) conventionné avec l''Université Louis Pasteur (Strasbourg 1), Strasbourg, France;The Scripps Research Institute, United States of America
Abstract:Eukaryotic cells restrain the activity of foreign genetic elements, including viruses, through RNA silencing. Although viruses encode suppressors of silencing to support their propagation, viruses may also exploit silencing to regulate host gene expression or to control the level of their accumulation and thus to reduce damage to the host. RNA silencing in plants propagates from cell to cell and systemically via a sequence-specific signal. Since the signal spreads between cells through plasmodesmata like the viruses themselves, virus-encoded plasmodesmata-manipulating movement proteins (MP) may have a central role in compatible virus:host interactions by suppressing or enhancing the spread of the signal. Here, we have addressed the propagation of GFP silencing in the presence and absence of MP and MP mutants. We show that the protein enhances the spread of silencing. Small RNA analysis indicates that MP does not enhance the silencing pathway but rather enhances the transport of the signal through plasmodesmata. The ability to enhance the spread of silencing is maintained by certain MP mutants that can move between cells but which have defects in subcellular localization and do not support the spread of viral RNA. Using MP expressing and non-expressing virus mutants with a disabled silencing suppressing function, we provide evidence indicating that viral MP contributes to anti-viral silencing during infection. Our results suggest a role of MP in controlling virus propagation in the infected host by supporting the spread of silencing signal. This activity of MP involves only a subset of its properties implicated in the spread of viral RNA.
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