Developmental Defects Mediated by the P1/HC-Pro Potyviral Silencing Suppressor Are Not Due to Misregulation of AUXIN RESPONSE FACTOR 81[OPEN]
Misregulation of ARF8 does not underlie developmental defects in Arabidopsis expressing a P1/HC-Pro transgene. Plant viral suppressors of RNA silencing induce developmental defects similar to those caused by mutations in genes involved in the microRNA pathway. A recent report has attributed viral su...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Plant physiology (Bethesda) 2016-09, Vol.172 (3), p.1853-1861 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Misregulation of ARF8 does not underlie developmental defects in Arabidopsis expressing a P1/HC-Pro transgene.
Plant viral suppressors of RNA silencing induce developmental defects similar to those caused by mutations in genes involved in the microRNA pathway. A recent report has attributed viral suppressor-mediated developmental defects to up-regulation of
AUXIN RESPONSE FACTOR 8
(
ARF8
), a target of miR167. The key piece of evidence was that the developmental defects in transgenic Arabidopsis (
Arabidopsis thaliana
) expressing viral suppressors were greatly alleviated in the F1 progeny of a cross with plants carrying the
arf8-6
mutation.
Arf8-6
is a SALK line T-DNA insertion mutant, a class of mutations prone to inducing transcriptional silencing of transgenes expressed from the 35S promoter. We have reinvestigated the role of
ARF8
in viral suppressor-mediated developmental defects, using two independent
arf8
mutations and the P1/HC-Pro potyviral suppressor of silencing. Progeny of a cross between
P1/HC-Pro
transgenic Arabidopsis and the
arf8-6
T-DNA insertion mutant showed little effect on the P1/HC-Pro phenotype in the F1 generation, but almost all
arf8-6
/
P1/HC-Pro
progeny had lost the phenotype in the F2 generation. However, the loss of phenotype in the F2 generation was not correlated with the number of functional copies of the
ARF8
gene. Instead, it reflected transcriptional silencing of the
P1/HC-Pro
transgene, as evidenced by a pronounced decrease in P1/HC-Pro mRNA and the appearance of 35S promoter small interfering RNAs. Furthermore, an independent loss-of-function point mutation,
Arf8-8
, had no detectable effects on P1/HC-Pro phenotype in either the F1 or F2 generations. Together, these data argue against the previously reported role of increased
ARF8
expression in developmental defects caused by
P1/HC-Pro
. |
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ISSN: | 0032-0889 1532-2548 |
DOI: | 10.1104/pp.16.01030 |