Elsevier

Virology

Volume 220, Issue 1, 1 June 1996, Pages 119-127
Virology

Regular Article
Resistance to Geminivirus Infection by Virus-Induced Expression of Dianthin in Transgenic Plants

https://doi.org/10.1006/viro.1996.0292Get rights and content
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Abstract

Ribosome-inactivating proteins (RIPs) are naturally occurring plant toxins that exhibit antiviral activity against a diverse range of plant and animal viruses. Here, the action of dianthin, a potent RIP isolated fromDianthus caryophyllus,has been exploited to engineer resistance to a plant DNA virus, African cassava mosaic virus (ACMV), in transgenicNicotiana benthamiana.To achieve this, dianthin has been expressed from the ACMV virion-sense promoter that is transactivated by the product of viral gene AC2. This avoids the need for constitutive expression of the RIP, facilitating the regeneration of phenotypically normal plants, and ensures transgene expression is localized to virus-infected cells. When challenged with ACMV, transgenic plants produce atypical necrotic lesions on inoculated leaves, indicative of dianthin expression, viral DNA accumulation is significantly reduced in these tissues, and plants exhibit attenuated systemic symptoms from which they recover. This phenotype holds for isolates of ACMV but not for other geminiviruses, suggesting that AC2 homologues from the latter are unable to efficiently transactivate the ACMV promoter.

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