Stopping plants from passing viruses to their progeny

Document Type : Scientific News

Author

National Forests and Rangelands Research Institute, National Botanical Research Department of Iran, Tehran, Iran

10.22092/irn.2025.368651.1634

Abstract

Plant viruses are often able to spread from one country to another through the seed trade. As a result, parent-to-progeny disease transmission is of global concern.

"Viruses can hide in seeds for years, making this one of the most important issues in agriculture," said UC Riverside distinguished professor Shou-Wei Ding in the Department of Microbiology and Plant Pathology. Ding is corresponding author of a new paper about the discovery in the journal Cell Host & Microbe.

When a mother plant with a virus makes, for example, 100 seeds, only between 0 and 5% of the seedlings are likely to become infected. For a century, scientists have wondered how the mothers are able to stop the virus from spreading to all or most of the young plants.

The UCR-led team wanted to solve this mystery by pinpointing the immune pathway that prevents virus transmission from parent to progeny, also called vertical transmission. The team succeeded. The strategy they used, and the pathway they identified, are detailed in the new paper.

Keywords


Liu, S. and Ding, Sh-W., 2024. Antiviral RNA interference inhibits virus vertical transmission in plants. Cell Host & Microbe. DOI: 10.1016/j.chom.2024.08.009