articleScienceMay 17, 2002Closed access

Induction and Suppression of RNA Silencing by an Animal Virus

University of California, Riverside

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

RNA silencing is a sequence-specific RNA degradation mechanism that is operational in plants and animals. Here, we show that flock house virus (FHV) is both an initiator and a target of RNA silencing in Drosophila host cells and that FHV infection requires suppression of RNA silencing by an FHV-encoded protein, B2. These findings establish RNA silencing as an adaptive antiviral defense in animal cells. B2 also inhibits RNA silencing in transgenic plants, providing evidence for a conserved RNA silencing pathway in the plant and animal kingdoms.

Citation impact

864
total citations
FWCI
95.47
Percentile
100%
References
22
Citations per year

Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • RNA silencing
  • Gene silencing
  • RNA-induced silencing complex
  • Trans-acting siRNA
  • RNA
  • RNA-induced transcriptional silencing
  • RNA interference
  • Biology
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