Original Article
C2-mediated decrease in DNA methylation, accumulation of siRNAs, and increase in expression for genes involved in defense pathways in plants infected with beet severe curly top virus
Article first published online: 15 JAN 2013
DOI: 10.1111/tpj.12081
© 2012 The Authors The Plant Journal © 2012 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Additional Information
How to Cite
Yang, L.-P., Fang, Y.-Y., An, C.-P., Dong, L., Zhang, Z.-H., Chen, H., Xie, Q. and Guo, H.-S. (2013), C2-mediated decrease in DNA methylation, accumulation of siRNAs, and increase in expression for genes involved in defense pathways in plants infected with beet severe curly top virus. The Plant Journal, 73: 910–917. doi: 10.1111/tpj.12081
Publication History
- Issue published online: 9 MAR 2013
- Article first published online: 15 JAN 2013
- Accepted manuscript online: 23 NOV 2012 12:49PM EST
- Manuscript Accepted: 20 NOV 2012
- Manuscript Revised: 16 NOV 2012
- Manuscript Received: 15 MAY 2012
Funded by
- Ministry of Science and Technology. Grant Number: 2011CB100700
- National Science Foundation of China. Grant Numbers: 91219301, 31030009
Keywords:
- C2 protein;
- germinivirus;
- RNA-directed DNA methylation;
- siRNAs
Summary
Cytosine methylation is one of epigenetic information marked on the DNA sequence. In plants, small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) target homologous genomic DNA sequences for cytosine methylation. This process, known as RNA-directed DNA methylation (RdDM), plays an important role in transposon control, regulation of gene expression and virus resistance. In this paper, we demonstrate that the C2 protein encoded by a geminivirus (beet severe curly top virus, BSCTV) mediated a decrease in DNA methylation of repeat regions in the promoters of ACD6, an upstream regulator of the salicylic acid defense pathway, and GSTF14, an endogenous gene of the glutathione S-transferase superfamily that is implicated in numerous stress responses. C2-mediated decreases in DNA methylation reduced accumulation of the siRNAs derived from the promoter repeats and enhanced the steady-state expression of both ACD6 and GSTF14 transcripts. Reduced accumulation of BSCTV-derived siRNAs was detected in BSCTV-infected plants, but not in plants infected with C2-deficient BSCTV (c2− BSCTV). C2 protein exhibited no siRNA-binding activity. Instead, our results revealed that C2 protein-mediated decreases in DNA methylation appeared to affect the production of siRNAs that are required for targeting and reinforcing RdDM, a process that activated expression of defense-related genes that are normally dampened by these siRNAs in the host plants. However, C2-dependent reduction in virus-derived siRNAs also benefits the viruses by disrupting the feedback loop reinforcing DNA methylation-mediated antiviral silencing.

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