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Catch Me If You Can! RNA Silencing-Based Improvement of Antiviral Plant Immunity.

Fatima Yousif GaffarAline Koch
Published in: Viruses (2019)
Viruses are obligate parasites which cause a range of severe plant diseases that affect farm productivity around the world, resulting in immense annual losses of yield. Therefore, control of viral pathogens continues to be an agronomic and scientific challenge requiring innovative and ground-breaking strategies to meet the demands of a growing world population. Over the last decade, RNA silencing has been employed to develop plants with an improved resistance to biotic stresses based on their function to provide protection from invasion by foreign nucleic acids, such as viruses. This natural phenomenon can be exploited to control agronomically relevant plant diseases. Recent evidence argues that this biotechnological method, called host-induced gene silencing, is effective against sucking insects, nematodes, and pathogenic fungi, as well as bacteria and viruses on their plant hosts. Here, we review recent studies which reveal the enormous potential that RNA-silencing strategies hold for providing an environmentally friendly mechanism to protect crop plants from viral diseases.
Keyphrases
  • sars cov
  • climate change
  • cell wall
  • nucleic acid
  • gene expression
  • drug induced
  • high glucose
  • cell migration
  • oxidative stress
  • genetic diversity
  • endothelial cells
  • single cell
  • diabetic rats
  • multidrug resistant