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      Identification of an RNA-silencing suppressor in the genome of Grapevine virus A.

      The Journal of General Virology
      Gene Expression, Genes, Reporter, Genetic Vectors, Green Fluorescent Proteins, analysis, Plant Diseases, virology, Plant Viruses, genetics, pathogenicity, Potexvirus, Protein Binding, RNA Interference, RNA Viruses, RNA, Small Interfering, metabolism, Tobacco, Transfection, Viral Proteins, physiology

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          Abstract

          Higher plants use post-transcriptional gene silencing (PTGS), an RNA-degradation system, as a defence mechanism against viral infections. To counteract this, plant viruses encode and express PTGS suppressor proteins. Four of the five proteins encoded by the Grapevine virus A (GVA) genome were screened using a green fluorescent protein (GFP)-based transient expression assay, and the expression product of ORF5 (protein p10) was identified as a suppressor of silencing. ORF5 p10 suppressed local and systemic silencing induced by a transiently expressed single-stranded sense RNA. This protein was active towards both a transgene and exogenous GFP mRNAs. Ectopic expression of GVA-ORF5 by a Potato virus X vector enhanced symptom severity. The findings that p10 markedly reduces the levels of small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) and that the recombinant protein is able to bind single-stranded and double-stranded forms of siRNAs and microRNAs, suggest the existence of a potential mechanism of suppression based on RNA sequestering.

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