학술논문

Role of Plant Virus Movement Proteins in Suppression of Host RNAi Defense.
Document Type
Article
Source
International Journal of Molecular Sciences. May2023, Vol. 24 Issue 10, p9049. 26p.
Subject
*PLANT viruses
*VIRAL proteins
*SMALL interfering RNA
*RNA interference
*NON-coding RNA
*HOST plants
*BASE pairs
Language
ISSN
1661-6596
Abstract
One of the systems of plant defense against viral infection is RNA silencing, or RNA interference (RNAi), in which small RNAs derived from viral genomic RNAs and/or mRNAs serve as guides to target an Argonaute nuclease (AGO) to virus-specific RNAs. Complementary base pairing between the small interfering RNA incorporated into the AGO-based protein complex and viral RNA results in the target cleavage or translational repression. As a counter-defensive strategy, viruses have evolved to acquire viral silencing suppressors (VSRs) to inhibit the host plant RNAi pathway. Plant virus VSR proteins use multiple mechanisms to inhibit silencing. VSRs are often multifunctional proteins that perform additional functions in the virus infection cycle, particularly, cell-to-cell movement, genome encapsidation, or replication. This paper summarizes the available data on the proteins with dual VSR/movement protein activity used by plant viruses of nine orders to override the protective silencing response and reviews the different molecular mechanisms employed by these proteins to suppress RNAi. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]