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Light intensity and temperature affect systemic spread of silencing signal in transient agroinfiltration studies.
Patil, Basavaprabhu L; Fauquet, Claude M.
Affiliation
  • Patil BL; Donald Danforth Plant Science Center, 975 N. Warson Rd., St. Louis, MO, 63132, USA; National Research Centre on Plant Biotechnology, IARI, Pusa Campus, New Delhi, 110012, India.
Mol Plant Pathol ; 16(5): 484-94, 2015 Jun.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25220764
ABSTRACT
RNA silencing is a sequence-specific post-transcriptional gene inactivation mechanism that operates in diverse organisms and that can extend beyond its site of initiation, owing to the movement of the silencing signal, called non-autonomous gene silencing. Previous studies have shown that several factors manifest the movement of the silencing signal, such as the size (21 or 24 nucleotides) of the secondary small interfering RNA (siRNA) produced, the steady-state concentration of siRNAs and their cognate messenger RNA (mRNA) or a change in the sink-source status of plant parts affecting phloem translocation. Our study shows that both light intensity and temperature have a significant impact on the systemic movement of the silencing signal in transient agroinfiltration studies in Nicotiana benthamiana. At higher light intensities (≥ 450 µE/m(2)/s) and higher temperatures (≥ 30 °C), gene silencing was localized to leaf tissue that was infiltrated, without any systemic spread. Interestingly, in these light and temperature conditions (≥ 450 µE/m(2) /s and ≥ 30 °C), the N. benthamiana plants showed recovery from the viral symptoms. However, the reduced systemic silencing and reduced viral symptom severity at higher light intensities were caused by a change in the sink-source status of the plant, ultimately affecting the phloem translocation of small RNAs or the viral genome. In contrast, at lower light intensities (<300 µE/m(2)/s) with a constant temperature of 25 °C, there was strong systemic movement of the silencing signal in the N. benthamiana plants and reduced recovery from virus infections. The accumulation of gene-specific siRNAs was reduced at higher temperature as a result of a reduction in the accumulation of transcript on transient agroinfiltration of RNA interference (RNAi) constructs, mostly because of poor T-DNA transfer activity of Agrobacterium, possibly also accompanied by reduced phloem translocation.
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Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Temperature / Nicotiana / Gene Silencing / Agrobacterium / Light Language: En Journal: Mol Plant Pathol Year: 2015 Document type: Article Affiliation country:

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Temperature / Nicotiana / Gene Silencing / Agrobacterium / Light Language: En Journal: Mol Plant Pathol Year: 2015 Document type: Article Affiliation country: