Global climate change is causing more frequent and severe droughts, which can have negative impacts on plant growth and crop productivity. Under drought conditions, plants produce the hormone ABA (abscisic acid), which regulates adaptive responses, such as stomatal closure and root elongation. Plant viruses have been used in the lab to convey new traits to plants and could also be used to increase production of ABA or to enhance downstream plant drought resistance responses. In this study, foxtail mosaic virus (FoMV) was used to silence ZmPP2C-A10, a negative regulator of ABA signalling, in maize (Zea mays L.). Both silenced and control plants were exposed to an 8-day drought treatment, followed by a 30-day period of rewatering, after which indicators of drought resistance were measured. After drought treatment, we observed a nearly twofold increase in expression of a stress-mitigation gene, ZmRAB17, reduced chlorophyll fluorescence changes (indicator of stress), and increased plant biomass and development in the ZmPP2C-A10-silenced maize compared to controls. These results demonstrate that the FoMV system can be used to silence endogenous expression of ZmPP2C-A10 and increase maize tolerance to drought. This could offer a useful tool to improve crop traits and reduce yield loss during the growing season.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/plb.13568 | DOI Listing |
Plant J
December 2024
DOE Center for Advanced Bioenergy and Bioproducts Innovation, St. Paul, Minnesota, 55108, USA.
The requirement of in vitro tissue culture for the delivery of gene editing reagents limits the application of gene editing to commercially relevant varieties of many crop species. To overcome this bottleneck, plant RNA viruses have been deployed as versatile tools for in planta delivery of recombinant RNA. Viral delivery of single-guide RNAs (sgRNAs) to transgenic plants that stably express CRISPR-associated (Cas) endonuclease has been successfully used for targeted mutagenesis in several dicotyledonous and few monocotyledonous plants.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Dis
May 2024
Corn, Soybean, and Wheat Quality Research Unit, United States Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service (USDA-ARS), Wooster, OH 44691.
Maize yellow mosaic virus (MaYMV) is an emerging polerovirus that has been detected in maize, other cereal crops, and weedy grass species in Asia, Africa, and the Americas. Disease symptoms in maize include prominent leaf tip reddening and stunting. Infection by MaYMV has been reported to reduce plant growth and yields by 10 to 30% in some instances.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Biol (Stuttg)
October 2023
Plant Pathology and Plant-Microbe Biology, School of Integrative Plant Sciences, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, USA.
Global climate change is causing more frequent and severe droughts, which can have negative impacts on plant growth and crop productivity. Under drought conditions, plants produce the hormone ABA (abscisic acid), which regulates adaptive responses, such as stomatal closure and root elongation. Plant viruses have been used in the lab to convey new traits to plants and could also be used to increase production of ABA or to enhance downstream plant drought resistance responses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Gen Virol
April 2023
Department of Plant Pathology, University of California, Davis, CA, USA.
Biotechnologies that use plant viruses as plant enhancement tools have shown great potential to flexibly engineer crop traits, but field applications of these technologies are still limited by efficient dissemination methods. Potyviruses can be rapidly inoculated into plants by aphid vectors due to the presence of the potyviral helper component proteinase (HC-Pro), which binds to the DAG motif of the coat protein (CP) of the virion. Previously it was determined that a naturally occurring DAG motif in the non-aphid-transmissible potexvirus, potato aucuba mosaic virus (PAMV), is functional when a potyviral HC-Pro is provided to aphids in plants.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Plant Pathol
July 2023
Department of Plant Pathology, Entomology, and Microbiology, Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa, USA.
Many plant viruses have been engineered into vectors for use in functional genomics studies, expression of heterologous proteins, and, most recently, gene editing applications. The use of viral vectors overcomes bottlenecks associated with mutagenesis and transgenesis approaches often implemented for analysis of gene function. There are several engineered viruses that are demonstrated or suggested to be useful in maize through proof-of-concept studies.
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