Content area

Abstract

Grafting experiments have revealed that transgenic plants that undergo co-suppression of homologous transgenes and endogenous genes or PTGS of exogenous transgenes produce a sequence-specific systemic silencing signal that is able to propagate from cell to cell and at long distance. Similarly, infection of transgenic plants by viruses that carry (part of) a transgene sequence results in global silencing (VIGS) of the integrated transgenes although viral infection is localized. Systemic PTGS and VIGS strongly resemble recovery from virus infection in non-transgenic plants, leading to protection against secondary infection in newly emerging leaves and PTGS of transiently expressed homologous transgenes. The sequence-specific PTGS signal is probably a transgene product (for example, aberrant RNA) or a secondary product (for example, RNA molecules produced by an RNA-dependent RNA polymerase with transgene RNA as a matrix) that mimics the type of viral RNA that is targeted for degradation by cellular defence. Whether some particular cases of transgene TGS could also rely on the production of such a mobile molecule is discussed.[PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]

Details

Title
Systemic silencing signal(s)
Author
Fagard, Mathilde; Vaucheret, Hervé
Pages
285-93
Publication year
2000
Publication date
Jun 2000
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
0167-4412
e-ISSN
1573-5028
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
770313804
Copyright
Kluwer Academic Publishers 2000