RNA silencing, or post-transcriptional gene silencing (PTGS), is a conserved mechanism in a broad range of eukaryotes. In plants, PTGS acts as an antiviral system and a successful virus infection requires suppression or evasion of the induced silencing response. Small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) accumulate in plants infected with RNA and DNA viruses and provide specificity to this RNA-mediated immune system. High-throughput sequencing has contributed to expanding our previously knowledge of siRNA populations better describing their abundance, complexity and diversity in infected tissues. It is now known that siRNAs from virus-infected plants are extraordinarily abundant and diverse, and are widespread in near saturation at any region of either positive and negative genomic RNAs. However, certain regions of viral genomes ("hot spots") are usually more represented than others in sequenced siRNA populations. A gene involved in chlorophyll biosynthesis has been shown targeted by a siRNA derived from viral satellite RNA, revealing PTGS mechanism at basis of the symptom. Potato virus Y (PVY) is the type species of Potyvirus, a genus of agricultural importance belonging to the largest plant virus family, Potyviridae. The potyviral genome is a single-stranded, positive-sense RNA of ca. 10 kilobases (kb). PVYc-to and PVY-SON41 are two isolates of PVY that infect solanaceous hosts. While PVYc-to induces severe leaf distortion in different cultivars of tomato (Solanum lycopersicum), PVY-SON41 produces in the same host only a mild mosaic, followed by recovery. In order to elucidate the molecular mechanism underlying the different symptoms induced by PVYc-to and PVY-SON41 infections on tomato, we set up an in silico approach, mining genomic regions of PVY isolates and looking at possible RNA-based mechanisms where siRNA putatively generated from the PVY genome could target and suppress accumulation of host messenger RNA (mRNA), leading to dysfunctional biological processes that could explain different disease phenotypes.

In silico prediction of virus-derived small interfering RNAs and their putative host messenger targets in Solanum lycopersicum infected by different Potato virus Y isolates

Catalano D;FinettiSialer MM;Cillo F
2013

Abstract

RNA silencing, or post-transcriptional gene silencing (PTGS), is a conserved mechanism in a broad range of eukaryotes. In plants, PTGS acts as an antiviral system and a successful virus infection requires suppression or evasion of the induced silencing response. Small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) accumulate in plants infected with RNA and DNA viruses and provide specificity to this RNA-mediated immune system. High-throughput sequencing has contributed to expanding our previously knowledge of siRNA populations better describing their abundance, complexity and diversity in infected tissues. It is now known that siRNAs from virus-infected plants are extraordinarily abundant and diverse, and are widespread in near saturation at any region of either positive and negative genomic RNAs. However, certain regions of viral genomes ("hot spots") are usually more represented than others in sequenced siRNA populations. A gene involved in chlorophyll biosynthesis has been shown targeted by a siRNA derived from viral satellite RNA, revealing PTGS mechanism at basis of the symptom. Potato virus Y (PVY) is the type species of Potyvirus, a genus of agricultural importance belonging to the largest plant virus family, Potyviridae. The potyviral genome is a single-stranded, positive-sense RNA of ca. 10 kilobases (kb). PVYc-to and PVY-SON41 are two isolates of PVY that infect solanaceous hosts. While PVYc-to induces severe leaf distortion in different cultivars of tomato (Solanum lycopersicum), PVY-SON41 produces in the same host only a mild mosaic, followed by recovery. In order to elucidate the molecular mechanism underlying the different symptoms induced by PVYc-to and PVY-SON41 infections on tomato, we set up an in silico approach, mining genomic regions of PVY isolates and looking at possible RNA-based mechanisms where siRNA putatively generated from the PVY genome could target and suppress accumulation of host messenger RNA (mRNA), leading to dysfunctional biological processes that could explain different disease phenotypes.
2013
VIROLOGIA VEGETALE
Solanum lycopersicum
Next Generation Sequencing
RNA
microRNA
plant-virus interactions
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/268756
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