Abstract

Summary.Tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum cvs Rutgers and Lichun) plants were firstly pre‐inoculated either with a cucumber mosaic virus (CMV) isolate containing satellite RNA (CMV‐S52) or with a CMV isolate without satellite RNA, and then challenged 14 days later with a severe strain of potato spindle tuber viroid (PSTVd). Also, tomato plants transformed with CMV satellite cDNA and non‐transgenic control plants were directly inoculated with PSTVd. Protection effects were assessed by the observation of symptoms and by assay of PSTVd accumulation in tomato plants using return polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and silver staining. The results indicated that the satellite‐transgenic plants and plants pre‐inoculated with CMV‐S52 showed much milder symptoms of PSTVd infection than the respective control plants. The concentration of PSTVd RNA in the satellite‐transgenic plants and CMV‐S52 pre‐inoculated plants was reduced to about 0.02‐0.03 of the controls. PSTVd infection did not increase the amount of satellite ds‐RNA in plants. It is concluded that the plant resistance to PSTVd is induced by the presence of satellite RNA rather than the CMV infection. It is suggested that as there is considerable sequence similarity between satellite RNA and PSTVd, base pairings may be a cause of reduction of both symptoms and the accumulation of PSTVd.

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