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Roles and Programming of Arabidopsis ARGONAUTE Proteins during Turnip Mosaic Virus Infection

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Title Roles and Programming of Arabidopsis ARGONAUTE Proteins during Turnip Mosaic Virus Infection
Names Garcia-Ruiz, Hernan (creator)
Carbonell, Alberto (creator)
Hoyer, J. Steen (creator)
Fahlgren, Noah (creator)
Takeda, Atsushi (creator)
Giampetruzzi, Annalisa (creator)
Lowery, Nicholas (creator)
Carrington, James C. (creator)
et al. (creator)
Date Issued 2015-03-25 (iso8601)
Note This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by the author(s) and published by the Public Library of Science. The published article can be found at: http://journals.plos.org/plospathogens/.
Abstract In eukaryotes, ARGONAUTE proteins (AGOs) associate with microRNAs (miRNAs), short
interfering RNAs (siRNAs), and other classes of small RNAs to regulate target RNA or target
loci. Viral infection in plants induces a potent and highly specific antiviral RNA silencing
response characterized by the formation of virus-derived siRNAs. Arabidopsis thaliana has
ten AGO genes of which AGO1, AGO2, and AGO7 have been shown to play roles in antiviral
defense. A genetic analysis was used to identify and characterize the roles of AGO proteins
in antiviral defense against Turnip mosaic virus (TuMV) in Arabidopsis. AGO1, AGO2
and AGO10 promoted anti-TuMV defense in a modular way in various organs, with AGO2
providing a prominent antiviral role in leaves. AGO5, AGO7 and AGO10 had minor effects
in leaves. AGO1 and AGO10 had overlapping antiviral functions in inflorescence tissues
after systemic movement of the virus, although the roles of AGO1 and AGO10 accounted
for only a minor amount of the overall antiviral activity. By combining AGO protein immunoprecipitation
with high-throughput sequencing of associated small RNAs, AGO2, AGO10,
and to a lesser extent AGO1 were shown to associate with siRNAs derived from silencing
suppressor (HC-Pro)-deficient TuMV-AS9, but not with siRNAs derived from wild-type
TuMV. Co-immunoprecipitation and small RNA sequencing revealed that viral siRNAs
broadly associated with wild-type HC-Pro during TuMV infection. These results support the
hypothesis that suppression of antiviral silencing during TuMV infection, at least in part, occurs through sequestration of virus-derived siRNAs away from antiviral AGO proteins by
HC-Pro. These findings indicate that distinct AGO proteins function as antiviral modules,
and provide a molecular explanation for the silencing suppressor activity of HC-Pro.
Genre Article
Access Condition http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/us/
Identifier Garcia-Ruiz, H., Carbonell, A., Hoyer, J. S., Fahlgren, N., Gilbert, K. B., Takeda, A., ... & Carrington, J. C. (2015). Roles and Programming of Arabidopsis ARGONAUTE Proteins during Turnip Mosaic Virus Infection. PLoS Pathogens, 11(3), e1004755. doi:10.1371/journal.ppat.1004755

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