AI Article Synopsis

  • The N-terminal domain (Rep130) of the Rep protein from the Tomato yellow leaf curl Sardinia virus helps in locating to the nucleus and down-regulating viral transcription, which is crucial for suppressing the virus in plants.
  • Tomato plants engineered to produce high levels of Rep130 exhibited resistance to TYLCSV and showed that Rep130 retains its functional catalytic activity, suggesting it can effectively combat the virus.
  • Analysis of gene expression in Rep130-expressing tomatoes indicated a shift towards stress-related transcriptional responses, including the up-regulation of serine-type protease inhibitors, highlighting the potential of Rep130 to influence host gene expression during viral infections.

Article Abstract

The N-terminal domain (amino acids 1-130) of the replication-associated protein (Rep130 ) of Tomato yellow leaf curl Sardinia virus (TYLCSV) retains the ability of full-length Rep to localize to the nucleus and to down-regulate C1 transcription when ectopically expressed in plants, both functions being required to inhibit homologous viral replication. In this study, we analysed the effect of Rep130 expression on virus resistance and the plant transcriptome in the natural and agronomically important host species of TYLCSV, Solanum lycopersicum. Tomato plants accumulating high levels of Rep130 were generated and proved to be resistant to TYLCSV. Using an in vitro assay, we showed that plant-expressed Rep130 also retains the catalytic activity of Rep, thus supporting the notion that this protein domain is fully functional. Interestingly, Rep130 -expressing tomatoes were characterized by an altered transcriptional profile resembling stress-related responses. Notably, the serine-type protease inhibitor (Ser-PI) category was over-represented among the 20 up-regulated genes. The involvement of Rep130 in the alteration of host mRNA steady-state levels was confirmed using a distinct set of virus-resistant transgenic tomato plants expressing the same TYLCSV Rep130 , but from a different, synthetic, gene. Eight genes were found to be up-regulated in both types of transgenic tomato and two encoded Ser-PIs. Four of these eight genes were also up-regulated in TYLCSV-infected wild-type tomato plants. Implications with regard to the ability of this Rep domain to interfere with viral infections and to alter the host transcriptome are discussed.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6638761PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/mpp.12063DOI Listing

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