烟草
生物
人口
烟草
RNA干扰
病毒学
RNA依赖性RNA聚合酶
基因沉默
遗传学
核糖核酸
基因
社会学
人口学
茄科
作者
Julia Bally,Kenlee Nakasugi,Fangzhi Jia,Hyungtaek Jung,Simon Y. W. Ho,M H Wong,Chloe M. Paul,Fatima Naim,Craig C. Wood,Ross Crowhurst,Roger P. Hellens,J. L. Dale,Peter M. Waterhouse
出处
期刊:Nature plants
[Nature Portfolio]
日期:2015-11-02
卷期号:1 (11)
被引量:148
标识
DOI:10.1038/nplants.2015.165
摘要
A single lineage of Nicotiana benthamiana is widely used as a model plant1 and has been instrumental in making revolutionary discoveries about RNA interference (RNAi), viral defence and vaccine production. It is peerless in its susceptibility to viruses and its amenability in transiently expressing transgenes2,3. These unparalleled characteristics have been associated both positively and negatively with a disruptive insertion in the RNA-dependent RNA polymerase 1 gene, Rdr14–6. For a plant so routinely used in research, the origin, diversity and evolution of the species, and the basis of its unusual abilities, have been relatively unexplored. Here, by comparison with wild accessions from across the spectrum of the species’ natural distribution, we show that the laboratory strain of N. benthamiana is an extremophile originating from a population that has retained a mutation in Rdr1 for ∼0.8 Myr and thereby traded its defence capacity for early vigour and survival in the extreme habitat of central Australia. Reconstituting Rdr1 activity in this isolate provided protection. Silencing the functional allele in a wild strain rendered it hypersusceptible and was associated with a doubling of seed size and enhanced early growth rate. These findings open the way to a deeper understanding of the delicate balance between protection and vigour.
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