Abstract

BackgroundVirus-derived siRNAs (vsiRNAs)-mediated RNA silencing plays important roles in interaction between plant viruses and their hosts. Southern rice black-streaked dwarf virus (SRBSDV) is a newly emerged devastating rice reovirus with ten dsRNA genomic segments. The characteristics of SRBSDV-derived siRNAs and their biological implications in SRBSDV-rice interaction remain unexplored.MethodsVsiRNAs profiling from SRBSDV-infected rice samples was done via small RNA deep sequencing. The putative rice targets of abundantly expressed vsiRNAs were bioinformatically predicted and subjected to functional annotation. Differential expression analysis of rice targets and RNA silencing components between infected and healthy samples was done using RT-qPCR.ResultsThe vsiRNA was barely detectable at 14 days post infection (dpi) but abundantly present along with elevated expression level of the viral genome at 28 dpi. From the 28-dpi sample, 70,878 reads of 18 ~ 30-nt vsiRNAs were recognized (which mostly were 21-nt and 22-nt), covering 75 ~ 91% of the length of the ten genomic segments respectively. 86% of the vsiRNAs had a <50% GC content and 79% of them were 5’-uridylated or adenylated. The production of vsiRNAs had no strand polarity but varied among segment origins. Each segment had a few hotspot regions where vsiRNAs of high abundance were produced. 151 most abundant vsiRNAs were predicted to target 844 rice genes, including several types of host resistance or pathogenesis related genes encoding F-box/LRR proteins, receptor-like protein kinases, universal stress proteins, tobamovirus multiplication proteins, and RNA silencing components OsDCL2a and OsAGO17 respectively, some of which showed down regulation in infected plants in RT-qPCR. GO and KEGG classification showed that a majority of the predicted targets were related to cell parts and cellular processes and involved in carbohydrate metabolism, translation, and signal transduction. The silencing component genes OsDCL2a, OsDCL2b, OsDCL4, and OsAGO18 were down regulated, while OsAGO1d, OsAGO2, OsRDR1 and OsRDR6 were up regulated, significantly, upon SRBSDV infection.ConclusionsSRBSDV can regulate the expression of rice RNA silencing pathway components and the virus might compromise host defense and influence host pathogenesis via siRNA pathways.

Highlights

  • Virus-derived small interfering RNAs (siRNAs)-mediated RNA silencing plays important roles in interaction between plant viruses and their hosts

  • In this study, we profiled the Virus-derived siRNAs (vsiRNAs) in SRBSDVinfected rice plants, and explored their potential roles in targeting a series of rice genes related to host defense, pathogenesis and symptomology

  • We found that Southern rice black-streaked dwarf virus (SRBSDV) infection could affect the expression of several rice RNA silencing pathway components

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Summary

Introduction

Virus-derived siRNAs (vsiRNAs)-mediated RNA silencing plays important roles in interaction between plant viruses and their hosts. RNA silencing or RNA interfering (RNAi) is an evolutionarily conserved gene inactivation mechanism that universally exists in eukaryotic organisms [1, 2] and plays critical roles in developmental regulation, response to stresses, and host defense against transposons and viruses [3,4,5]. Invasion of plant viruses may initiate DCL-mediated biogenesis of primary virusderived siRNAs (vsiRNAs) from double-stranded viral replicative intermediates (RI) or secondary-structured ssRNA genomic regions [7,8,9], and the vsiRNAs are incorporated into Argonaute (AGO) proteins to form the RNA-induced silencing complex (RISC) that cleaves the viral RNAs or host mRNAs in a sequence-specific manner [9,10,11,12,13]. For the counter-counter defense, plants constantly evolve disease resistance (R) genes which encode R proteins to interact with VSR, triggering effector-triggered immunity (ETI) and leading to hypersensitive response (HR)-based resistance [5, 17]

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