Transgenic RNA interference (RNAi)-derived field resistance to cassava brown streak disease

Abstract
Cassava brown streak disease (CBSD), caused by the Ipomoviruses Cassava brown streak virus (CBSV) and Ugandan Cassava brown streak virus (UCBSV), is considered to be an imminent threat to food security in tropical Africa. Cassava plants were transgenically modified to generate small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) from truncated full-length (894-bp) and N-terminal (402-bp) portions of the UCBSV coat protein (DCP) sequence. Seven siRNA-producing lines from each gene construct were tested under confined field trials at Namulonge, Uganda. All nontransgenic control plants (n = 60) developed CBSD symptoms on aerial tissues by 6 months after planting, whereas plants transgenic for the full-length DCP sequence showed a 3-month delay in disease development, with 98% of clonal replicates within line 718-001 remaining symptom free over the 11-month trial. Reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) diagnostics indicated the presence of UCBSV within the leaves of 57% of the nontransgenic controls, but in only two of 413 plants tested (0.5%) across the 14 transgenic lines. All transgenic plants showing CBSD were PCR positive for the presence of CBSV, except for line 781-001, in which 93% of plants were confirmed to be free of both pathogens. At harvest, 90% of storage roots from nontransgenic plants were severely affected by CBSD-induced necrosis. However, transgenic lines 718- 005 and 718-001 showed significant suppression of disease, with 95% of roots from the latter line remaining free from necrosis and RT-PCR negative for the presence of both viral pathogens. Crossprotection against CBSV by siRNAs generated from the full-length UCBSV DCP confirms a previous report in tobacco.The information presented provides proof of principle for the control of CBSD by RNA interference-mediated technology, and progress towards the potential control of this damaging disease.
Description
Keywords
Transgenic RNA interference (RNAi), Field resistance, Cassava brown streak disease
Citation
Ogwok, E., Odipio, J., Halsey, M., Gaitán‐Solís, E., Bua, A., Taylor, N. J., ... & Alicai, T. (2012). Transgenic RNA interference (RNA i)‐derived field resistance to cassava brown streak disease. Molecular plant pathology, 13(9), 1019-1031. DOI: 10.1111/J.1364-3703.2012.00812.X