Abstract
Plant viruses have long been recognized as valuable tools for plant molecular biology, and they continue to provide a rapid way to transiently manipulate gene expression for basic science and more applied purposes. The advantages of virus-based approaches for manipulating gene expression are several: promoters, especially those driving expression of coat protein genes, are typically strong and active in many/most plant tissues; many replicate autonomously to form multicopy replicons; and systemic movement allows inoculation in one tissue to spread throughout the whole organism. Disadvantages can include a narrow host range such that a virus conveniently infecting one species will be non-infectious on another; compact genomes and packaging constraints can limit insert sizes; the extent of systemic spread and viral titer in recipient tissues can be patchy; and rapid replication and propensity for recombination can lead to loss of engineered sequences as the virus reverts to the most efficient form for replication and spread.
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Ayre, B. G., El-Gebaly, F. E., & McGarry, R. C. (2020). Virus-induced flowering - A tool for cereals. Journal of Experimental Botany, 71(10), 2839–2841. https://doi.org/10.1093/jxb/eraa153
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