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THE PLANT CELL, Vol 9, Issue 8 1495-1504, Copyright © 1997 by American Society of Plant Biologists
A Transcriptionally Active State Is Required for Post-Transcriptional Silencing (Cosuppression) of Nitrate Reductase Host Genes and Transgenes
H. Vaucheret, L. Nussaume, J. C. Palauqui, I. Quillere and T. Elmayan
Laboratoire de Biologie Cellulaire, Centre INRA de Versailles, F-78026 Versailles Cedex, France
Using tobacco nitrate reductase cosuppression as a model system of
post-transcriptional gene silencing, we analyzed the influence of DNA and
RNA dosages both together and independently. For this purpose, zero, one,
two, or four active or transcriptionally silenced copies of a cauliflower
mosaic virus 35S-Nia2 transgene were combined by transformation and
subsequent crosses with zero, one, two, three, or four active, disrupted,
or transcriptionally repressed copies of the wild-type host Nia genes. The
analysis of the corresponding transgenic lines revealed that (1) the
percentage of isogenic plants that are affected by cosuppression depends
directly upon the relative dosage of both host gene and transgene; (2)
transcriptional silencing of the 35S-Nia transgene impedes cosuppression;
and (3) the absence of host gene transcription reduces the frequency of
cosuppression or delays its triggering. Taken together, these results
indicate that transgene DNA per se is not sufficient to trigger
post-transcriptional cosuppression of nitrate reductase host genes and
transgenes. The requirement for a transcriptionally active state is
discussed with respect to both the RNA dosage and the DNA-DNA pairing
hypotheses.
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