SUBVIRAL PATHOGENS OF PLANTS - VIROIDS AND VIROID-LIKE SATELLITE RNAS

被引:62
作者
DIENER, TO
机构
[1] UNIV MARYLAND,CTR AGR BIOTECHNOL,COLLEGE PK,MD 20742
[2] UNIV MARYLAND,DEPT BOT,COLLEGE PK,MD 20742
关键词
PLANT DISEASES; CIRCULAR RNAS; ROLLING CIRCLE REPLICATION; RNA EVOLUTION; RNA WORLD;
D O I
10.1096/fasebj.5.13.1717335
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Contrary to earlier beliefs, viruses are not the smallest causative agents of infectious diseases. Single-stranded RNAs as small as 246 nucleotides exist in certain higher plants and cause more than a dozen crop diseases. These RNAs have been termed viroids. Despite their extremely limited information content, viroids replicate autonomously in susceptible cells - that is, they do not require helper functions from simultaneously replicating conventional viruses. Viroids are covalently closed circular molecules with a characteristic rodlike secondary structure in which short helical regions are interrupted by internal and bulge loops. Viroids are not translated; they are replicated by a host enzyme (or enzymes) (probably RNA polymerase II) via oligomeric RNA intermediates by a rolling circle mechanism. Viroidlike satellite RNAs resemble viroids in size and molecular structure, but are found within the capsids of specific helper viruses on which they depend for their own replication. These RNAs are of great interest to molecular biology for at least two reasons: 1) they are the smallest and simplest replicating molecules known, and 2) they may represent living fossils of precellular evolution in a hypothetical RNA world.
引用
收藏
页码:2808 / 2813
页数:6
相关论文
共 59 条