MicroRNA profiling of <it>tomato leaf curl new delhi virus </it>(tolcndv) infected tomato leaves indicates that deregulation of mir159/319 and mir172 might be linked with leaf curl disease

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Tomato leaf curl virus (ToLCV), a constituent of the genus <it>Begomovirus</it>, infects tomato and other plants with a hallmark disease symptom of upward leaf curling. Since microRNAs (miRs) are known to control plants d...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Haq Qazi MR, Naqvi Afsar R, Mukherjee Sunil K
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2010-10-01
Series:Virology Journal
Online Access:http://www.virologyj.com/content/7/1/281
id doaj-5422f11b4586451bb1fd8c0e10dae90c
record_format Article
spelling doaj-5422f11b4586451bb1fd8c0e10dae90c2020-11-24T20:41:59ZengBMCVirology Journal1743-422X2010-10-017128110.1186/1743-422X-7-281MicroRNA profiling of <it>tomato leaf curl new delhi virus </it>(tolcndv) infected tomato leaves indicates that deregulation of mir159/319 and mir172 might be linked with leaf curl diseaseHaq Qazi MRNaqvi Afsar RMukherjee Sunil K<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Tomato leaf curl virus (ToLCV), a constituent of the genus <it>Begomovirus</it>, infects tomato and other plants with a hallmark disease symptom of upward leaf curling. Since microRNAs (miRs) are known to control plants developmental processes, we evaluated the roles of miRNAs in <it>Tomato leaf curl New Delhi virus </it>(ToLCNDV) induced leaf curling.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Microarray analyses of miRNAs, isolated from the leaves of both healthy and ToLCNDV agroinfected tomato cv Pusa Ruby, revealed that ToLCNDV infection significantly deregulated various miRNAs representing ~13 different conserved families (e.g., miR319, miR172, etc.). The precursors of these miRNAs showed similar deregulated patterns, indicating that the transcription regulation of respective miRNA genes was perhaps the cause of deregulation. The expression levels of the miRNA-targeted genes were antagonistic with respect to the amount of corresponding miRNA. Such deregulation was tissue-specific in nature as no analogous misexpression was found in flowers. The accumulation of miR159/319 and miR172 was observed to increase with the days post inoculation (dpi) of ToLCNDV agroinfection in tomato cv Pusa Ruby. Similarly, these miRs were also induced in ToLCNDV agroinfected tomato cv JK Asha and chilli plants, both exhibiting leaf curl symptoms. Our results indicate that miR159/319 and miR172 might be associated with leaf curl symptoms. This report raises the possibility of using miRNA(s) as potential signature molecules for ToLCNDV infection.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>The expression of several host miRNAs is affected in response to viral infection. The levels of the corresponding pre-miRs and the predicted targets were also deregulated. This change in miRNA expression levels was specific to leaf tissues and observed to be associated with disease progression. Thus, certain host miRs are likely indicator of viral infection and could be potentially employed to develop viral resistance strategies.</p> http://www.virologyj.com/content/7/1/281
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Haq Qazi MR
Naqvi Afsar R
Mukherjee Sunil K
spellingShingle Haq Qazi MR
Naqvi Afsar R
Mukherjee Sunil K
MicroRNA profiling of <it>tomato leaf curl new delhi virus </it>(tolcndv) infected tomato leaves indicates that deregulation of mir159/319 and mir172 might be linked with leaf curl disease
Virology Journal
author_facet Haq Qazi MR
Naqvi Afsar R
Mukherjee Sunil K
author_sort Haq Qazi MR
title MicroRNA profiling of <it>tomato leaf curl new delhi virus </it>(tolcndv) infected tomato leaves indicates that deregulation of mir159/319 and mir172 might be linked with leaf curl disease
title_short MicroRNA profiling of <it>tomato leaf curl new delhi virus </it>(tolcndv) infected tomato leaves indicates that deregulation of mir159/319 and mir172 might be linked with leaf curl disease
title_full MicroRNA profiling of <it>tomato leaf curl new delhi virus </it>(tolcndv) infected tomato leaves indicates that deregulation of mir159/319 and mir172 might be linked with leaf curl disease
title_fullStr MicroRNA profiling of <it>tomato leaf curl new delhi virus </it>(tolcndv) infected tomato leaves indicates that deregulation of mir159/319 and mir172 might be linked with leaf curl disease
title_full_unstemmed MicroRNA profiling of <it>tomato leaf curl new delhi virus </it>(tolcndv) infected tomato leaves indicates that deregulation of mir159/319 and mir172 might be linked with leaf curl disease
title_sort microrna profiling of <it>tomato leaf curl new delhi virus </it>(tolcndv) infected tomato leaves indicates that deregulation of mir159/319 and mir172 might be linked with leaf curl disease
publisher BMC
series Virology Journal
issn 1743-422X
publishDate 2010-10-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Tomato leaf curl virus (ToLCV), a constituent of the genus <it>Begomovirus</it>, infects tomato and other plants with a hallmark disease symptom of upward leaf curling. Since microRNAs (miRs) are known to control plants developmental processes, we evaluated the roles of miRNAs in <it>Tomato leaf curl New Delhi virus </it>(ToLCNDV) induced leaf curling.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Microarray analyses of miRNAs, isolated from the leaves of both healthy and ToLCNDV agroinfected tomato cv Pusa Ruby, revealed that ToLCNDV infection significantly deregulated various miRNAs representing ~13 different conserved families (e.g., miR319, miR172, etc.). The precursors of these miRNAs showed similar deregulated patterns, indicating that the transcription regulation of respective miRNA genes was perhaps the cause of deregulation. The expression levels of the miRNA-targeted genes were antagonistic with respect to the amount of corresponding miRNA. Such deregulation was tissue-specific in nature as no analogous misexpression was found in flowers. The accumulation of miR159/319 and miR172 was observed to increase with the days post inoculation (dpi) of ToLCNDV agroinfection in tomato cv Pusa Ruby. Similarly, these miRs were also induced in ToLCNDV agroinfected tomato cv JK Asha and chilli plants, both exhibiting leaf curl symptoms. Our results indicate that miR159/319 and miR172 might be associated with leaf curl symptoms. This report raises the possibility of using miRNA(s) as potential signature molecules for ToLCNDV infection.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>The expression of several host miRNAs is affected in response to viral infection. The levels of the corresponding pre-miRs and the predicted targets were also deregulated. This change in miRNA expression levels was specific to leaf tissues and observed to be associated with disease progression. Thus, certain host miRs are likely indicator of viral infection and could be potentially employed to develop viral resistance strategies.</p>
url http://www.virologyj.com/content/7/1/281
work_keys_str_mv AT haqqazimr micrornaprofilingofittomatoleafcurlnewdelhivirusittolcndvinfectedtomatoleavesindicatesthatderegulationofmir159319andmir172mightbelinkedwithleafcurldisease
AT naqviafsarr micrornaprofilingofittomatoleafcurlnewdelhivirusittolcndvinfectedtomatoleavesindicatesthatderegulationofmir159319andmir172mightbelinkedwithleafcurldisease
AT mukherjeesunilk micrornaprofilingofittomatoleafcurlnewdelhivirusittolcndvinfectedtomatoleavesindicatesthatderegulationofmir159319andmir172mightbelinkedwithleafcurldisease
_version_ 1716823648856178688