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Biotechnology,
Breeding and Seed Systems for African Crops
A combinatorial
chemistry approach for broad-based geminivirus disease resistance
L. Lopez-Ochoa,
L. Hanley-Bowdoin
Geminiviruses are
single-stranded DNA viruses that infect important crops worldwide, often
occurring as mixed infections in the field. In Africa, they cause
significant losses in cassava, maize, tomato, cotton and bean crops. Efforts
to generate geminivirus-resistant plants based on conventional breeding and
pathogen-derived transgenic approaches have been of limited success, often
resulting in reduced susceptibility or tolerance to a narrow range of
viruses and with the resistant plants serving as reservoirs for viral
evolution. Hence, it is essential to develop an alternative resistance
strategy that confers broad-based, stable immunity to geminivirus infection.
To address this need, we used a
combinatorial chemistry approach to identify peptide aptamers that interfere
with the geminivirus replication protein (Rep). Rep is highly conserved
among geminiviruses and other eukaryotic single-stranded DNA viruses. Its
N-terminus contains several conserved motifs that are required for viral
replication, making them excellent targets for an interfering peptide
strategy. We screened a constrained random peptide library in yeast
two-hybrid assays to identify peptides that bind to tomato golden mosaic
virus (TGMV) Rep. The library plasmids contained a LexA DNA binding domain
fused to the bacterial thioredoxin (Trx) coding sequence with a random
60-mer sequence inserted into the active site. Using the first 130 amino
acids of Rep fused to a synthetic activation domain as bait, we isolated 597
positive candidates in a screen of 2 x 107 yeast colonies. Interaction with
Rep was confirmed for 287 colonies, and prey plasmids were recovered and
sequenced from 130 colonies. We selected 88 unique sequences for further
analysis in transient replication interference assays. In these assays,
tobacco protoplasts were cotransfected with a wild-type TGMV A replicon and
a plant expression cassette corresponding to the Trx-peptide fusion, and
viral DNA replication was measured after a 36-hour culture period. To
facilitate high throughput screening, we developed a semi-quantitative
polymerase chain reaction (PCR) protocol to measure viral DNA accumulation.
These experiments established that 28 of the 88 selected Trx-peptide fusions
interfere with geminivirus replication. Sequence comparison of the
interfering peptides revealed that they contain homologous amino acids with
conserved spacing. To date, we have identified three different sequence
groups that are represented among the interfering peptides. We also used
yeast growth assays to show that the Rep protein from the cabbage leaf curl
virus (CaLCuV) binds to 77 of the 88 selected peptides, including the 28
peptides that display replication interference activity. This result is
particularly promising because TGMV and CaLCuV belong to different
begomovirus clades with distinct Rep proteins. We are currently examining
the peptide binding properties of Rep proteins from the three major
geminivirus genera.
Breadth and strength of interaction and replication interference will be
used to select Trx-peptides for expression in transgenic plants and testing
in geminivirus infectivity assays. |
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