Antiviral silencing and suppression of gene silencing in plants

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Abstract

RNA silencing is an evolutionary conserved sequence-specific gene inactivation mechanism that contributes to the control of development, maintains heterochromatin, acts in stress responses, DNA repair and defends against invading nucleic acids like transposons and viruses. In plants RNA silencing functions as one of the main immune systems. RNA silencing process involves the small RNAs and trans factor components like Dicers, Argonautes and RNA-dependent RNA polymerases. To deal with host antiviral silencing responses viruses evolved mechanisms to avoid or counteract this, most notably through expression of viral suppressors of RNA silencing. Due to the overlap between endogenous and antiviral silencing pathways while blocking antiviral pathways viruses also impact endogenous silencing processes. Here we provide an overview of antiviral silencing pathway, host factors implicated in it and the crosstalk between antiviral and endogenous branches of silencing. We summarize the current status of knowledge about the viral counter-defense strategies acting at various steps during virus infection in plants with the focus on representative, well studied silencing suppressor proteins. Finally we discuss future challenges of the antiviral silencing and counter-defense research field.

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Csorba, T., & Burgyán, J. (2016). Antiviral silencing and suppression of gene silencing in plants. In Current Research Topics in Plant Virology (pp. 1–33). Springer International Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-32919-2_1

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