| Literature DB >> 17239233 |
Muhammad Mubin1, Shahid Mansoor, Mazhar Hussain, Yusuf Zafar.
Abstract
Whitefly-transmitted geminiviruses (genus Begomovirus) are phytopathogens that cause heavy losses to crops worldwide. Efforts to engineer resistance against these viruses are focused mainly on silencing of complementary-sense virus genes involved in virus replication. Here we have targeted a virion-sense gene (AV2) to develop resistance against Tomato leaf curl New Delhi virus, a bipartite begomovirus prevalent throughout the Indian subcontinent. We show that tobacco plants transformed with an antisense construct targeting this gene are resistant to the virus. Following challenged with the virus, transgenic plants remained symptomless, although viral DNA could be detected in some plants by PCR. This is the first report of transgenic resistance against a bipartite begomovirus obtained by targeting a virion-sense gene. The relatively conserved nature of the gene suggests that the technology may be useful to develop broad-spectrum resistance which is required because of the fact that plants are often infected with multiple begomoviruses in the field.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17239233 PMCID: PMC1796863 DOI: 10.1186/1743-422X-4-10
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Virol J ISSN: 1743-422X Impact factor: 4.099
Figure 1Transformed . (Figure1 A) Southern hybridisation of EcoRI restricted DNA extracted from six primary transformed plants probed for AV2 sequences. Either 1 or 2 hybridising bands were detected in 5 of the 6 samples. (Figure1 B) Control N. tabacum plants inoculated with cloned ToLCNDV developed symptoms typical of ToLCNDV (left panel). Plants expressing the antisense-AV2 construct remained symptomless (right panel). Photographs were taken 3 weeks post-inoculation. (Figure1 C) Southern hybridisation of DNA extracted from control (lanes 1–6) and antisense-AV2 transformed (lanes 7–16) N. tabacum plants inoculated with cloned ToLCNDV. The blot was probed for the presence of the DNA A component of the virus. (Figure1 D) Serial dilutions of DNA extracted from three antisense-AV2 transformed plants (Lanes 1–12) and controls (Lanes 15–18) were tested for the presence of ToLCNDV by PCR. Dilution is made ten folds. In two transgenic lines the presence of ToLCNDV was detected only at higher template DNA concentrations.