Efficient gene silencing mediated by tobacco rattle virus in an emerging model plant physalis.

PLoS One

State Key Laboratory of Systematic and Evolutionary Botany, Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China.

Published: September 2014

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores the gene functional inference platform using a virus-mediated gene-silencing system (TRV) in Physalis floridana to understand fruit diversity and features like the inflated calyx syndrome (ICS).
  • Researchers characterized a phytoene desaturase gene (PfPDS) and demonstrated that silencing it led to a bleached phenotype across multiple plant organs, suggesting that local treatments can induce systemic mutations.
  • The team optimized the VIGS methodology to downregulate two MADS-box genes, MPF2 and MPF3, revealing their novel role in pedicel development and providing a more time-efficient way to study gene functions compared to traditional RNA interference methods.

Article Abstract

The fruit of Physalis has a berry and a novelty called inflated calyx syndrome (ICS, also named the 'Chinese lantern'). Elucidation of the underlying developmental mechanisms of fruit diversity demands an efficient gene functional inference platform. Here, we tested the application of the tobacco rattle virus (TRV)-mediated gene-silencing system in Physalis floridana. First, we characterized the putative gene of a phytoene desaturase in P. floridana (PfPDS). Infecting the leaves of the Physalis seedlings with the PfPDS-TRV vector resulted in a bleached plant, including the developing leaves, floral organs, ICS, berry, and seed. These results indicated that a local VIGS treatment can efficiently induce a systemic mutated phenotype. qRT-PCR analyses revealed that the bleaching extent correlated to the mRNA reduction of the endogenous PfPDS. Detailed comparisons of multiple infiltration and growth protocols allowed us to determine the optimal methodologies for VIGS manipulation in Physalis. We subsequently utilized this optimized VIGS methodology to downregulate the expression of two MADS-box genes, MPF2 and MPF3, and compared the resulting effects with gene-downregulation mediated by RNA interference (RNAi) methods. The VIGS-mediated gene knockdown plants were found to resemble the mutated phenotypes of floral calyx, fruiting calyx and pollen maturation of the RNAi transgenic plants for both MPF2 and MPF3. Moreover, the two MADS-box genes were appeared to have a novel role in the pedicel development in P. floridana. The major advantage of VIGS-based gene knockdown lies in practical aspects of saving time and easy manipulation as compared to the RNAi. Despite the lack of heritability and mosaic mutation phenotypes observed in some organs, the TRV-mediated gene silencing system provides an alternative efficient way to infer gene function in various developmental processes in Physalis, thus facilitating understanding of the genetic basis of the evolution and development of the morphological diversities within the Solanaceae.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3891815PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0085534PLOS

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