| Literature DB >> 16446454 |
Maghsoud Pazhouhandeh1, Monika Dieterle, Katia Marrocco, Esther Lechner, Bassam Berry, Véronique Brault, Odile Hemmer, Thomas Kretsch, Kenneth E Richards, Pascal Genschik, Véronique Ziegler-Graff.
Abstract
Plants employ small RNA-mediated posttranscriptional gene silencing as a virus defense mechanism. In response, plant viruses encode proteins that can suppress RNA silencing, but the mode of action of most such proteins is poorly understood. Here, we show that the silencing suppressor protein P0 of two Arabidopsis-infecting poleroviruses interacts by means of a conserved minimal F-box motif with Arabidopsis thaliana orthologs of S-phase kinase-related protein 1 (SKP1), a component of the SCF family of ubiquitin E3 ligases. Point mutations in the F-box-like motif abolished the P0-SKP1 ortholog interaction, diminished virus pathogenicity, and inhibited the silencing suppressor activity of P0. Knockdown of expression of a SKP1 ortholog in Nicotiana benthamiana rendered the plants resistant to polerovirus infection. Together, the results support a model in which P0 acts as an F-box protein that targets an essential component of the host posttranscriptional gene silencing machinery.Entities:
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Year: 2006 PMID: 16446454 PMCID: PMC1413668 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0510784103
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205