نتایج جستجو برای: tomato bushy stunt virus

تعداد نتایج: 420672  

Journal: :Plant physiology 2004
Joachim F Uhrig Tomas Canto David Marshall Stuart A MacFarlane

The P19 protein of tomato bushy stunt virus (TBSV) is a multifunctional pathogenicity determinant involved in suppression of posttranscriptional gene silencing, virus movement, and symptom induction. Here, we report that P19 interacts with the conserved RNA-binding domain of an as yet uncharacterized family of plant ALY proteins that, in animals, are involved in export of RNAs from the nucleus ...

Journal: :Journal of virology 2009
Pavan Kumar Sandra Uratsu Abhaya Dandekar Bryce W Falk

Previously we described Tomato bushy stunt virus (TBSV) vectors, which retained their capsid protein gene and were engineered with magnesium chelatase (ChlH) and phytoene desaturase (PDS) gene sequences from Nicotiana benthamiana. Upon plant infection, these vectors eventually lost the inserted sequences, presumably as a result of recombination. Here, we modified the same vectors to also contai...

2007
Vijay S. Reddy

Expression of full-length and N-terminal deletion mutants of the coat protein (CP) of tomato bushy stunt virus (TBSV) using the recombinant baculovirus system resulted in spontaneously assembled virus-like particles (VLPs). Deletion of the majority of the R-domain sequence of the CP, residues 1–52 (CP-NΔ52) and 1–62 (CP-NΔ62), produced capsids similar to wild-type VLPs. Interestingly, the CP-NΔ...

Journal: :Journal of virology 2008
Ana M Martín-Hernández David C Baulcombe

RNA silencing is a host defense mechanism that limits the accumulation and spread of viruses in infected plants. Correspondingly, plant viruses encode suppressors of silencing. In the positive-strand RNA virus Tobacco rattle virus (TRV), the suppressor of silencing is a 16-kDa (16K) protein encoded by RNA1. The suppressor action of the 16K protein is transient and weaker than that of the P19 su...

Journal: :The Journal of general virology 2009
Rebecca L Ambrose Gabriel C Lander Walid S Maaty Brian Bothner John E Johnson Karyn N Johnson

The vinegar fly, Drosophila melanogaster, is a popular model for the study of invertebrate antiviral immune responses. Several picorna-like viruses are commonly found in both wild and laboratory populations of D. melanogaster. The best-studied and most pathogenic of these is the dicistrovirus Drosophila C virus. Among the uncharacterized small RNA viruses of D. melanogaster, Drosophila A virus ...

Journal: :Journal of chromatography. A 2015
J Ruščić I Gutiérrez-Aguirre M Tušek Žnidarič S Kolundžija A Slana M Barut M Ravnikar M Krajačić

The emergence of next-generation "deep" sequencing has enabled the study of virus populations with much higher resolutions. This new tool increases the possibility of observing mixed infections caused by combinations of plant viruses, which are likely to occur more frequently than previously thought. The biological impact of co-infecting viruses on their host has yet to be determined and fully ...

Journal: :Journal of Biological Chemistry 1940

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