Virus-induced cell death in plants expressing the mammalian 2',5' oligoadenylate system
- PMID: 9634822
- DOI: 10.1038/nbt1196-1566
Virus-induced cell death in plants expressing the mammalian 2',5' oligoadenylate system
Abstract
The major components of the 2-5A system, responsible for the mammalian interferon-induced antiviral response, are the 2',5' oligoadenylate synthetase (2-5Aase) and 2',5' oligoadenylate (2-5A) dependent ribonuclease (RNase L). Transgenic tobacco plants expressing these two enzyme activities were produced by crossing the transgenic plants expressing RNase L with those expressing 2-5Aase. The double transgenic plants showed complete resistance against cucumber mosaic virus (CMV), infection with necrotic spots only forming on the virus-inoculated leaf. On the other hand, although plants inoculated with potato virus Y (PVY) formed necrotic spots on the inoculated leaf and virus amplification could not be detected, all plants died within 20 days of inoculation. The transgenic tobacco plants expressing either 2-5Aase or RNase L activity showed typical disease symptoms with CMV- or PVY-inoculation. These results suggest that the introduced 2-5A system is activated in tobacco cells by dsRNA, the replicating intermediates of RNA viruses, leading to death of the host cells, which has not been observed in mammalian cells.
Comment in
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The 2',5' a antiviral system in plants: a dose of mammalian medicine.Nat Biotechnol. 1996 Nov;14(11):1538-9. doi: 10.1038/nbt1196-1538b. Nat Biotechnol. 1996. PMID: 9634815 No abstract available.
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