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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Analysis of a tobacco mosaic virus strain capable of overcoming N gene-mediated resistance.

The genome of Ob, a tobamovirus that overcomes the N gene-mediated hypersensitive response (HR), was cloned as a cDNA, and its nucleotide sequence was determined. The genomic organization of Ob is similar to that of other tobamoviruses, consisting of 6506 nucleotides and containing at least four open reading frames. These open reading frames encode a 126-kD polypeptide with a 183-kD readthrough product, a 30.6-kD movement protein, and an 18-kD coat protein. A bacteriophage T7 promoter sequence was fused to the full-length cDNA clone to obtain infectious RNA transcripts. These transcripts, when inoculated onto tobacco plants, induced disease symptoms indistinguishable from plants inoculated with Ob viral RNA. To determine which viral factor is responsible for the resistance-breaking character of Ob, a recombinant virus was constructed in which the movement protein gene of tobacco mosaic virus was replaced with that of Ob. Cultivar Xanthi NN tobacco plants infected with this virus responded with an HR, indicating that the Ob movement protein alone does not act to overcome the N gene-mediated response. Following mutagenesis of the infectious Ob cDNA clone with hydroxylamine, populations of transcripts from the mutagenized DNA were inoculated onto Xanthi NN tobacco, and a variant that induced the HR was identified. The mutant was analyzed and found to contain a single nucleotide change in the 126-kD gene. Recreating the mutation in the Ob cDNA clone by site-directed mutagenesis resulted in a virus that caused symptoms identical to the chemically induced mutant.[1]

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