4.6 Article

Movement and differential consumption of short interfering RNA duplexes underlie mobile RNA interference

Journal

NATURE PLANTS
Volume 6, Issue 7, Pages 789-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41477-020-0687-2

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Funding

  1. Marie Curie Intra-European Fellowship [623826]
  2. EMBO Long-Term Fellowship [ALTF 728-2009]
  3. European Research Council [323071]
  4. European Research Council (ERC) [323071] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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Short interfering RNA (siRNA) can silence genes in neighbouring and distant plant cells. The authors show that transgenes, endogenous genes and viruses are silenced through the movement of free primary siRNA duplexes, which are progressively diluted and simultaneously selectively depleted during this process. In RNA interference (RNAi), the RNase III Dicer processes long double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) into short interfering RNA (siRNA), which, when loaded into ARGONAUTE (AGO) family proteins, execute gene silencing(1). Remarkably, RNAi can act non-cell autonomously(2,3): it is graft transmissible(4-7), and plasmodesmata-associated proteins modulate its cell-to-cell spread(8,9). Nonetheless, the molecular mechanisms involved remain ill defined, probably reflecting a disparity of experimental settings. Among other caveats, these almost invariably cause artificially enhanced movement via transitivity, whereby primary RNAi-target transcripts are converted into further dsRNA sources of secondary siRNA(5,10,11). Whether siRNA mobility naturally requires transitivity and whether it entails the same or distinct signals for cell-to-cell versus long-distance movement remains unclear, as does the identity of the mobile signalling molecules themselves. Movement of long single-stranded RNA, dsRNA, free/AGO-bound secondary siRNA or primary siRNA have all been advocated(12-15); however, an entity necessary and sufficient for all known manifestations of plant mobile RNAi remains to be ascertained. Here, we show that the same primary RNAi signal endows both vasculature-to-epidermis and long-distance silencing movement from three distinct RNAi sources. The mobile entities are AGO-free primary siRNA duplexes spreading length and sequence independently. However, their movement is accompanied by selective siRNA depletion reflecting the AGO repertoires of traversed cell types. Coupling movement with this AGO-mediated consumption process creates qualitatively distinct silencing territories, potentially enabling unlimited spatial gene regulation patterns well beyond those granted by mere gradients.

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