Abstract
RNA-dependent RNA polymerases (RDRs) play a key role in various RNA silencing pathways in many organisms. Using the nucleotide sequence of SGS2/SDE1/RDR6 in Arabidopsis as the search query for sequences that flank the insertions of rice retrotransposon Tos17, we selected rice mutant lines (OsRDR1). RT-PCR analysis showed that OsRDR1 mRNA was undetectable in leaves and calli of the mutants, while it was detected in wild type. RNA silencing was induced by particle bombardment to investigate any effects of OsRDR1 on RNA silencing with β-glucuronidase or green fluorescent protein DNA/RNA in the mutant lines. The results showed that RNA silencing was impaired in these mutant lines by inverted repeat (IR) DNA or in vitro transcribed double-stranded RNA. Further, the mutant lines were bombarded with Brome mosaic bromovirus (BMV, a ssRNA virus) or Wheat dwarf geminivirus (WDV, a ssDNA virus), each carrying the IR sequence of a reporter gene. As a result, RNA silencing was impaired by BMV. Interestingly, however, it was not impaired by WDV. Thus we propose that OsRDR1 is required for RNA silencing mediated by Bromovirus, but not by Geminivirus in this system.
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Introduction
RNA-dependent RNA polymerases (RDRs) play a fundamental role in various RNA silencing pathways in numerous organisms (Curaba and Chen 2008; Wassenegger and Krczal 2006; Yang et al. 2008). The first RDR was discovered about 40 years ago in a search for enzymes that catalyze plant RNA viral replication (Astier-Manifacier and Cornuet 1971). The first plant-encoded RDR was isolated from tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum), and is now called LeRDR1 (Schiebel et al. 1993). In the fungus Neurospora crassa, NcRDR6 (QDE-1) is an essential component of quelling and can convert a single-stranded RNA (ssRNA) to a double-stranded (dsRNA) molecule in a primer-dependent/independent fashion (Makeyev and Bamford 2002). In Arabidopsis thaliana, six RDRs were identified as AtRDR1, AtRDR2, AtRDR3a, AtRDR3b, AtRDR3c and AtRDR6, three of which (RDR3a, RDR3b, RDR3c) share the unique DFDGD amino acid motif in the catalytic domain (Voinnet 2008; Wassenegger and Krczal 2006). Recent findings indicate that RDR1, RDR2 and RDR6 act in different biological processes of RNA silencing (Dalmay et al. 2000; Mourrain et al. 2000; Xie et al. 2004). RDR1 expression is induced by salicylic acid (SA), a defense-signaling hormone that accumulates during infection by many viruses and viroids (Dorssers et al. 1984; Khan et al. 1986; Xie et al. 2001). More recent studies with Cucumber mosaic virus (CMV) demonstrate that the production of small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) is strongly dependent on RDR1 without interference by the virus-encoded 2b silencing suppressor protein called viral suppressors of RNA silencing, and RDR1-dependent secondary virus-derived siRNAs (viRNAs) play a key role in non-cell-autonomous antiviral silencing (Diaz-Pendon et al. 2007). It also implies that virus encoded proteins may inhibit one or more RDR pathways of siRNA biogenesis associated with silencing suppressor proteins (Donaire et al. 2008), while other reports indicate that RDR1 mediates defense against herbivore attacks in Nicotiana attenuata (Pandey and Baldwin 2007). RDR2 transcripts in N. attenuata are up-regulated by both UV and herbivore elicitation for protection (Pandey and Baldwin 2008), while RDR6 is known to be involved in initiation and maintenance of post-transcriptional gene silencing (PTGS) and virus-induced gene silencing (VIGS) (Wassenegger and Krczal 2006). RDR6 is required for VIGS induced by Cabbage leaf curl virus (CaLCuV) and CMV, but not by Turnip crinkle virus (TCV), Tobacco rattle virus (TRV), Turnip mosaic virus or Tobacco mosaic virus (Diaz-Pendon et al. 2007; Muangsan et al. 2004; Vaucheret 2006; Voinnet 2005).
In rice, five RDRs have been identified: OsRDR1, OsRDR2, OsRDR3a, OsRDR3b and OsRDR6 (Wassenegger and Krczal 2006). A recent study indicates that the OsRDR6-dependent siRNA biogenesis that derives from an isocitrate lyase transcript was significantly up-regulated by the phytohormone abscisic acid (ABA), and OsRDR6 may participate in the amplification of PTGS mediated by ABA in rice (Yang et al. 2008). The function of other RDR enzymes remains a key question. Here we isolated and identified several OsRDR1 mutant lines using the nucleotide sequence of SGS2/SDE1/RDR6 in Arabidopsis as the query to search for the sequences that flank the insertions of rice retrotransposon Tos17. We used particle bombardment to establish an RNA silencing system to investigate any effects of OsRDR1 on RNA silencing with various silencing inducers, including inverted repeat (IR) DNA or dsRNA, in these mutant lines. We tested the role of OsRDR1 in RNA silencing mediated by Wheat dwarf virus (a ssDNA geminivirus, WDV) or Brome mosaic virus (a ssRNA bromovirus, BMV), each carrying the IR sequence of a reporter gene. Here we used either β-glucuronidase (GUS) or green fluorescent protein (GFP) to make the data more versatile and to use the viral vectors available, pWI-GUS (Ugaki et al. 1991) and BMV-GFP. Our analyses show that OsRDR1 is required for RNA silencing mediated by BMV, but not by WDV.
Materials and methods
Rice plants
Oryza sativa L. cv. Nipponbare and its knockout mutant lines (ND2001 and ND2059) were used. The homozygous individuals from M1 and M2 generation were screened by Southern blot analyses. Seedlings and calli of selected M2 plants were grown and used for respective experiments.
Southern blot analysis
Employing the cetyltrimethyl ammonium bromide (CTAB) method, we isolated rice genomic DNA (20 μg) and transferred it to a nylon membrane as described previously (Chen et al. 2008). Using the PCR DIG probe Synthesis Kit (Roche, Basel, Switzerland), the probe was prepared as described previously (Chen et al. 2008). A plasmid carrying the flanking sequences in each mutant was constructed as template DNA in the following protocol: a PCR product amplified from the coding region of OsRDR1 by using forward primer (5′-AAACCCTTGCCTCCACCCAGGTG-3′) and reverse primer (5′-ATGGACTATACTCCAGCACCAA-3′), and the fragment amplified was then inserted into pUC19 (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA, USA), which had been digested with SmaI. The probes were labeled according to the manufacturer’s instructions. DNA was then fixed to the membrane by UV irradiation, and the prehybridization and hybridization were done as described (Engler-Blum et al. 1993) for subsequent exposure to X-ray film (Boehringer Mannheim, Mannheim, Germany) for 12–18 h. Hybridizations were performed with DIG-dUTP-labeled (digoxigenin-labeled) DNA probes.
DNA sequencing and sequence analysis
DNA sequencing, sequence analysis and homologue searching were carried out as described previously (Chen et al. 2008).
Plasmids used for transient expression
The GFP expression plasmid p35S-GFP and the DsRed (Discosoma red fluorescent protein) expression plasmid pUbq-DsRed driven by an enhanced 35S promoter of Cauliflower mosaic virus (CaMV) and an ubiquitin promoter of maize polyubiquitin, respectively, were provided by Miki and Shimamoto (2004). Plasmid GFP RNAi was transcribed into an RNA predicted to form a double-stranded hairpin RNA structure (Miki and Shimamoto 2004). Plasmid pIG121 contains GUS, driven by the CaMV 35S promoter and 35S terminator, respectively (Ohta et al. 1990). Plasmid pUbq-DsRed was used as an internal control (Miki and Shimamoto 2004). The p35S-GUS RNAi was described previously (Chen et al. 2008).
The plasmid of pWI-GUS is a plant–bacterium shuttle vector derived from WDV having GUS under the control of the 35S promoter and terminator (Ugaki et al. 1991). The pWI-GUS RNAi was constructed as follows (Fig. 1a): a fragment containing the GUS sense fragment and λ phage sequence was derived from p35S-GUS RNAi through digestion with EcoRI and SacI, cloned to pBluescriptII KS+ (Stratagene), creating pBS-GUS + λ. A PCR product containing a 831-bp linker of λ phage and 1300 bp of the inverted-repeat GUS fragment was amplified with pBS-GUS + λ as a template using forward primer 5′-GCCGCATGCGAATTCGGACAGACAGTG-3′ containing the SphI site (underlined) and reverse primer 5′-GCCGCATGCGGGAATGGTGATTACCGAC-3′ containing the SphI site (underlined). The amplified fragment was digested with SphI and inserted into the end of the GUS fragment of pWI-GUS, which had been digested partially with SphI (5 min at 37°C), so that the plasmid pWI-GUS RNAi was constructed after the orientation was selected and verified by sequencing.
The mixture of BMV-GFP or BMV-GFP RNAi (Fig. 1b) was derived from in vitro transcription of pBTF1, pBTF2 and pBTFCP2smGFP or pBTFCP2hpGFP2, respectively (Mori et al. 1993). pBTFCP2smGFP and pBTFCP2hpGFP2 were constructed as follows (Fig. 1b): the smGFP gene was amplified by PCR using primers 5′-GGGATGCATGAGTAAAGGAGAAGAACT-3′ and 5′-GGGGAGCTCTTATTTGTATAGTTCATCCATGCC-3′ from clone smGFP from the Arabidopsis Biological Resource Center at Ohio State University. The PCR product was digested with NsiI and SacI and inserted between the NsiI and SacI site of pBTFCP2pIFN (Mori et al. 1993). The resulting plasmid was digested with NsiI, blunt-ended with T4 DNA polymerase, then self-ligated, creating pBTFCP2smGFP. Then two DNA fragments, the one encoding 0.1 kbp from the C-terminus-, and the other encoding 0.4 kbp from the C-terminus of the GFP gene, was amplified using primer sets #1554 (5′-ATAACTAGTTTTCGAAAGATCCCAACGAA-3′)–#1553 (5′-TATGAGCTCGTCGACTAAAGCTCATCATGTTTGT-3′), and #1555 (5′-ATAACTAGTCAAGACACGT-GCTGAAGTCA-3′)–#1553, respectively. As a PCR template, pBI-erG3 (Tamai et al. 2003) was used. The #1554–#1553 and the #1555–#1553 fragments were digested by SacI/SpeI, and SalI/SpeI, respectively, ligated with SalI/SacI-digested pBTFCP2smGFP. The resulting plasmid was named pBTFCP2hpGFP2, which was engineered to carry the GFP 301 bp as a spacer between an IR of GFP 98 bp.
As a complementation study, the p35S-OsRDR1 containing a whole ORF-coding region of cDNA from OsRDR1 (3342 bp) was constructed as follows: two RT-PCR fragments (cDNA1, 1769 bp and cDNA2, 1583 bp) were amplified with forward primer 5′-GGATCCTGCGCCATGGGTGTCAA-3′ containing the BamHI site (underlined) and reverse primer 5′-GCATGCTTTTTCTTAAGGAAAG-3′ containing the SphI site (underlined) and using forward primer 5′-GCATGCTAAAGTTTCAGTCAGA-3′ containing the SphI site (underlined) and reverse primer 5′-GAGCTCAAACATGCTGGCCACA-3′ containing the SacI site (underlined), respectively. The cDNA1 fragment was inserted into the pdTA2 vector (Toyobo, Osaka, Japan). This resulted in pdTA2-cDNA1. The cDNA2 fragment was digested with SphI and SacI and inserted into pdTA2-cDNA1, which had been digested with SphI and SacI, creating pdTA2-cDNA1 + cDNA2, then this plasmid was digested with BamHI and SacI to isolate a fragment of cDNA1 + cDNA2, which was gel-purified and inserted into pBI221, which had been digested with BamHI and SacI (to remove GUS). This resulted in p35S-OsRDR1 containing a whole ORF-coding region of cDNA from OsRDR1 (3342 bp). The construct was verified by sequencing.
In vitro synthesis of dsRNA
In vitro synthesis of dsRNA for GUS was carried out as described previously (Chen et al. 2008).
Transient expression after particle bombardment
Gold particles (0.6 μm diameter, particle density 31 mg/ml; Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO, USA) were coated with the respective mixture of plasmids, then delivered biolistically into leaf segments through a particle inflow gun (IDERA GIE-III, Tanaka, Sapporo, Japan). The samples were bombarded (2.5 kg/cm2 force and 500 mmHg pressure) with the gold particles coated with the following amounts of plasmids or dsRNA per shot: for RNA silencing with GUS and WDV, (i) pIG121 (5 μg) and pBIΔGUS (control vector) (5 μg), (ii) pIG121 (5 μg) and p35S-GUS RNAi (10 μg), (iii) pIG121 (5 μg) and dsGUS RNA (5 μg), (iv) p35S-GUS (5 μg), p35S-GUS RNAi (10 μg) and p35S-OsRDR1 (10 μg), (v) pIG121 (5 μg) and pWI-GUS RNAi (10 μg); for RNA silencing with GFP gene and BMV, (i) pUbq-DsRed (5 μg), p35S-GFP (5 μg) and pBI221 (control vector) (5 μg), (ii) pUbq-DsRed (5 μg), p35S-GFP (5 μg) and GFP RNAi (10 μg); (iii) pUbq-DsRed (5 μg), p35S-GFP (5 μg), GFP RNAi (10 μg) and p35S-OsRDR1 (10 μg), (iv) pUbq-DsRed (5 μg), p35S-GFP (5 μg) and BMV-GFP RNAi (10 μg); for BMV replication, pUbq-DsRed (5 μg) and BMV-GFP (10 μg); for WDV replication, pUbq-DsRed (5 μg) and pWI-GUS RNAi (10 μg). In the case of real-time RT-PCR analysis with GUS silencing, DsRed was used for normalization as a reference gene in all treatments.
After bombardment, the expression of GFP and GUS was detected as described previously (Chen et al. 2008).
RNA isolation and analysis
Following the manufacturer’s instructions (Tri reagent kit, Molecular Research Center, Cincinnati, OH, USA), total RNA was extracted from rice leaves and calli, mRNA was purified using an Oligotex™-dT30 <Super> mRNA Purification Kit (Takara, Shiga, Japan), and mRNA treated with RNase-free DNase (Stratagene) was used as a template for RT-PCR with reverse transcriptase (MonsterScript™ 1st-Strand cDNA Synthesis Kit, Epicentre, Madison, WI, USA). RT-PCR was carried out using RT primer 5′-ATACGAGGCGGAATGAGAG-3′. The cDNA products of RT-PCR were then amplified by the following pairs of primers: 5′-GCTTGGATGAAACACGTAC-3′ (forward) and 5′-ATACGAGGCGGAATGAGAG-3′ (reverse). Rice ubiquitin was used as an internal standard (Miki and Shimamoto 2004).
Real-time RT-PCR experiments for detecting the expression of GFP and GUS were carried out as described previously (Chen et al. 2008), and real-time PCR experiments were done with the sets of primers specific to 10 kDa protein of WDV (5′-GGAGGCTTTTGGACCACATCTTTT-3′ and 5′-TTCCTCGGTCCTCCTTTGCTTCTT-3′). The amount of DsRed transcripts was used for normalization as an internal control.
Results
Isolation of homozygous OsRDR1 knockout mutant lines
Homozygous OsRDR1 knockout mutant lines from the Tos17 insertion populations available at the Rice Tos17 Insertion Mutant Database (http://tos.nias.affrc.go.jp/~miyao/pub/tos17/index.html.en) were selected based on the nucleotide sequence of SGS2/SDE1/RDR6 in Arabidopsis. Two lines (ND2001 and ND2059) had the highest homology to that sequence (referred to as AtRDR6). In these lines, Tos17 is inserted at the same site as OsRDR1, suggesting that these two were each a callus clone derived from one transformation event because these mutants were selected by tissue culture (Hirochika 2001). The phylogenetic analysis of OsRDR1 and other RDRs showed that this gene is most closely related to AtRDR1, and thus it is referred to as OsRDR1 (Wassenegger and Krczal 2006). The flanking sequence of each mutant line was used to design the primers and to make the specific DNA probes as shown in the materials and methods. The co-segregation analysis of XbaI-digested genomic DNA, isolated from each of the individual mutant lines, was carried out by Southern blot analysis; one of three ND2001 and one out of three ND2059 plants were homozygous (Fig. 2a). Furthermore, no significant differences between the wild type (WT) and the homozygous knockout mutant lines have been observed from germination through flowering (data not shown), indicating that the OsRDR1 gene is not required for essential biological processes for morphology.
Identification of OsRDR1 homologues in rice
To identify OsRDR1 in rice, we searched for the SGS2/SDE1/RDR6 sequence in the rice genome sequence database from DNA Bank at the National Institute of Agrobiological Sciences (http://www.dna.affrc.go.jp) and from the chromatin database (http://www.chromdb.org) at the University of Arizona. The flanking sequence of lines ND2001 and ND2059 each had high identity to one genomic clone from chromosome 2, AP004880, one cDNA clone from AK101440 and one transcript sequence from RDR704. Using this information, one putative cDNA of rice RDR was cloned by RT-PCR as described in the materials and methods. Combining these results, AK101440 might be an incomplete clone including a missing transcript in exon 4. Comparison of the putative cDNA and its corresponding genomic sequences revealed that OsRDR1 consists of four exons interrupted by three introns (Fig. 2b). Two mutant lines have the same Tos17 insertions in exon 2 (Fig. 2b). A phylogenetic relationship between RDR homologues in rice and Arabidopsis was established. A Neighbor-Joining tree from bootstrap analysis (1000 replicates) was constructed using MEGA software version 3.1. These results indicate that OsRDR1 is in the same clade as AtRDR1 with a 99% consensus value of bootstrap in Fig. S1 in Electronic Supplementary Material.
The expression of OsRDR1 in WT and mutant lines (ND2001 and ND2059) was examined with RT-PCR analysis using specific primers for OsRDR1. OsRDR1 mRNA was not detected in the young leaves or calli of the mutants, while a significant level was found in the WT after running 30 PCR cycles (Fig. 2c). These results indicate that OsRDR1 was not expressed in the mutant lines due to the insertion of Tos17.
Effects of OsRDR1 disruption on RNA silencing induced by particle bombardment with IR DNA or dsRNA
As we previously reported (Chen et al. 2008), a transient RNA silencing system targeted to GUS was examined. The different mixtures of plasmids were used. As shown in Fig. 3a, b, substantial levels of GUS were expressed at 48 h post-bombardment in the histochemical GUS assay of the WT and mutant line ND2001 when bombarded with plasmid (i) pIG121. The number of GUS expressing cells per shot was counted for quantitative analysis in three to six independent experiments (n = 3–6 shots). When using mixture (ii) pIG121 and p35S-GUS RNAi, the number of GUS-expressing cells was reduced in the WT but not in the mutant line. When using mixture (iii) pIG121 and dsGUS, a dsRNA for GUS silencing, the number of GUS-expressing cells in the WT clearly decreased but not in the mutant line (Fig. 3a, b). The specific silencing of GUS was recovered by co-bombardment with mixture (iv) including plasmid p35S-OsRDR1 in the WT and mutant line (ND2001) (Fig. 3a, b). Moreover, the accumulation of GUS transcripts versus DsRed transcripts (as an internal control) was examined in the leaf discs from the WT and the mutant line at 48 h post-bombardment with the mixture of those plasmids by real-time RT-PCR (Fig. 3c). Similar results were obtained with three independent experiments essentially as levels of GUS-expressing cells (Fig. 3b). These results were similar to those from the other mutant line (ND2059) (data no shown). Thus, in the mutant lines, RNA silencing was impaired by IR-DNA and dsRNA of GUS.
Effects of OsRDR1 disruption on RNA silencing mediated by plant ssDNA/ssRNA viruses
It is worthwhile examining whether the OsRDR1 gene is required for virus-mediated RNA silencing by particle co-bombardment. There are no appropriate viral vectors that infect rice plants available; thus, we selected WDV (ssDNA) and BMV (ssRNA), both of which are reported to infect rice protoplasts (Huntley and Hall 1996; Laufs et al. 1990). Here, experiments with this co-expression system were performed to detect RNA silencing with pIG121 and pWI-GUS RNAi constructed as described in the materials and methods. Specific silencing of GUS was observed after co-bombardment with mixture (v) including plasmid pWI-GUS RNAi in the WT and the mutant line (ND2001) (Fig. 3a). This result indicates that OsRDR1 is not required for WDV-mediated RNA silencing. To confirm bombardment efficiency, we also examined accumulation of GUS transcripts versus DsRed transcripts (as an internal control) in the leaf discs from the WT and the mutant line at 48 h post-bombardment with the mixture of those plasmids by real-time RT-PCR (Fig. 3c). These results indicate that the levels of GUS transcript in the leaf discs bombarded were accordant with the levels GUS-expressing cells (Fig. 3a). To check the possibility that WDV interferes with the transcription of GUS, an additional experiment has been done with pWI-GUS instead of pIG121. Figure S2a in ESM reveals that both the WT and mutant line (ND2001) expressed GUS (WDV driven) when bombarded with plasmid mixture (i) pWI-GUS and control DNA(pBI∆GUS). With mixture (iii) pWI-GUS and pWI-GUS RNAi, the number of cells that expressed GUS decreased markedly in the WT and in the mutant line, similar to the results shown in Fig. 3a (v). Furthermore, Fig. S2b (i) indicates that DsRed expression remained at a stable level as with GUS (WDV driven) expression. All these results showed that the WDV did not affect expression of GUS or DsRed gene.
We also examined whether BMV affected RNA silencing in the mutant line in this system. For RNA silencing induction, we used BMV-GFP RNAi, in vitro transcripts from BMV cDNA clones. These cDNA clones were the same as reported previously for RNA1 and 2 (Mori et al. 1993). For RNA3, pBTFCP2hpGFP2 was constructed to carry IR-GFP sequence in place of the 5′-half of coat protein gene (CP). When mixture (i) or (ii) in Fig. 4 was used for bombardment, respectively, again the same results as in Fig. 3 were obtained, showing that RNA silencing of GFP was impaired in the mutant line (Fig. 4a). The number of GFP- or DsRed-fluorescing expressing cells was also counted for quantitative analysis from three independent experiments (n = 3 shots). With p35S-OsRDR1 in mixture (iii), which contains a whole ORF-coding region of OsRDR1 cDNA, specific silencing of GFP was distinctly recovered in the mutant line, with the number of GFP-fluorescing cells decreasing as markedly in the mutant line as in the WT (Fig. 4a). When using mixture (iv), which contained BMV-GFP RNAi instead of GFP RNAi, there was an obvious decrease in the number of GFP-fluorescing cells in the WT but not in the mutant line, while the number of DsRed-fluorescing cells remained constant in all treatments. To verify bombardment efficiency, we also used real-time RT-PCR to compare the accumulation of GFP transcripts to that of DsRed transcripts in leaf discs from the WT and the mutant line at 36 h post-bombardment with the various mixtures (Fig. 4b). Similar results were obtained with mutant line ND2059 (data no shown). These results showed that OsRDR1 was required for BMV-mediated RNA silencing.
To make sure that both viruses are able to replicate in bombarded rice leaf discs, we checked for BMV and WDV replication at different times post-bombardment by real-time RT-PCR and PCR, respectively (Fig. 5). The results show that BMV and WDV were able to replicate in the bombarded leaf discs of both WT and mutant rice.
Discussion
In fungi, plants and several animals, RDRs are an independent class of enzymes with an important role in RNA silencing, heterochromatin formation and natural gene regulation. Previous findings show that RDR6, SDE3, SGS3 and AGO1 are required for sense transgene-mediated PTGS in Arabidopsis, whereas these genes are not involved in IR transgene-mediated PTGS (Dalmay et al. 2000; Diaz-Pendon et al. 2007; Mourrain et al. 2000; Wassenegger and Krczal 2006). In our research, RNA silencing was induced not only by IR-DNAs but also by dsRNA in the WT. However, RNA silencing was impaired by introduction of either IR-DNA or dsRNA in the OsRDR1-deficient mutant lines. These results suggest that OsRDR1 is required at the RNA level after transcription for RNA silencing.
Previous studies show that RDR1 is induced by SA treatment, virus and viroid infection (Dorssers et al. 1984; Khan et al. 1986; Wassenegger and Krczal 2006). The loss-of-function in the RDR1 mutant was expressed as enhanced disease susceptibility to various viruses (Xie et al. 2001; Yu et al. 2003). In Arabidopsis, the accumulation of TRV RNA in the RDR1 mutant was significantly higher than in the WT, and disease symptoms in the mutant appeared to be more severe than in the WT (Yu et al. 2003). In N. tabacum, a potato virus X strain could spread and cause a systemic infection in the RDR1 mutant line but not in the WT (Xie et al. 2001). Most recently, the finding revealed that the biogenesis of CMV siRNAs was found to be largely dependent on RDR1 in plants infected with CMV-Δ2b, and genes such as SGS3, SDE3 and AGO1 might also be essential for RDR1-dependent silencing amplification in relation to the production of second siRNAs of CMV (Diaz-Pendon et al. 2007).
In our study, the results from the BMV-GFP RNAi experiments show that OsRDR1 might be attributed to the amplification level of silencing related to the production of second BMV siRNA (Fig. 4a, b). However, WDV-mediated RNA silencing was not impaired in the mutant lines (Fig. 3a, b), possibly because geminivirus transcription depends on host-DNA-dependent RNA polymerase (Hanley-Bowdoin et al. 2000). VIGS by geminivirus might be amplified by other host RDRs such as RDR2 and RDR6 (Muangsan et al. 2004). Geminivirus DNA was suggested to be methylated by the RNA-directed DNA methylation pathway requiring PolIVa, RDR2, DCL3 and AGO4 in Arabidopsis (Donaire et al. 2008). Thus, WDV in this study is also presumed to be affected in rice by OsRDR2 instead of OsRDR1.
In this RNA-silencing system, we have no data on siRNA, a hallmark of RNA silencing. After co-bombarded with the mixture containing BMV-GFP, GFP RNAi and pUbqDsRed, however, BMV-GFP was clearly reduced (data not shown) like the result shown in Fig. 4, mixture (ii). This finding confirmed that RNA silencing functioned in this system as reported by English et al. (1996). Thus, the siRNA must be produced in each bombarded cell although it is difficult to check at the single cell level. The siRNA could be detected using protoplasts as shown by Qi et al. (2004).
Although rice is not a host for either BMV or WDV (http://www.agls.uidaho.edu/ebi/vdie/sppindex.htm), in some reports, each of these viruses infected and replicated in rice protoplasts (Huntley and Hall 1996; Laufs et al. 1990). Our results in Fig. 5 showed that each virus could at least replicate in the leaf discs after co-bombardment. In the BMV vector used, the 5′-half of CP was replaced by the GFP sequence, which might possibly leave the virus unable to move from cell to cell (Schmitz and Rao 1996). In the WDV vector, the region covering the CP and part of the movement protein genes was replaced by a selectable marker (NPTII) and GUS (Ugaki et al. 1991). Thus, its cell-to-cell movement would be impaired. In Fig. S2a (i) experiment in ESM, only a single cell expressed GUS (data not shown), suggesting that the virus did not spread from cell to cell. Similarly, with BMV vector, GFP was expressed in only one cell (data not shown). The spread GUS/GFP expression after co-bombardment with the wild-type virus would also be worth checking.
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Acknowledgments
The authors wish to thank K. Shimamoto and D. Miki for plasmids pUbq-DsRed, p35S-GFP and GFP RNAi and K. Nakamura for plasmid pIG121. They are also grateful to D. Murphy for his English correction. This work was supported by the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries of Japan (Green Technology Project, MP2137). Scholarship for H. C. was supported by the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology of Japan.
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Chen, H., Tamai, A., Mori, M. et al. Analysis of rice RNA-dependent RNA polymerase 1 (OsRDR1) in virus-mediated RNA silencing after particle bombardment. J Gen Plant Pathol 76, 152–160 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10327-010-0226-5
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10327-010-0226-5