Natural and Engineered Resistance Mechanisms in Plants against Phytoviruses

Pathogens. 2023 Apr 19;12(4):619. doi: 10.3390/pathogens12040619.

Abstract

Plant viruses, as obligate intracellular parasites, rely exclusively on host machinery to complete their life cycle. Whether a virus is pathogenic or not depends on the balance between the mechanisms used by both plants and viruses during the intense encounter. Antiviral defence mechanisms in plants can be of two types, i.e., natural resistance and engineered resistance. Innate immunity, RNA silencing, translational repression, autophagy-mediated degradation, and resistance to virus movement are the possible natural defence mechanisms against viruses in plants, whereas engineered resistance includes pathogen-derived resistance along with gene editing technologies. The incorporation of various resistance genes through breeding programmes, along with gene editing tools such as CRISPR/Cas technologies, holds great promise in developing virus-resistant plants. In this review, different resistance mechanisms against viruses in plants along with reported resistance genes in major vegetable crops are discussed.

Keywords: Plant viruses; engineered resistance; gene editing tool; natural resistance; resistance genes; vegetable crops.

Publication types

  • Review

Grants and funding

Different financial grants received from ICAR, DBT, and DST are acknowledged. Financial support from ICAR to authors A.M. and R.B. in terms of fellowships (Order No. Ag. Edn. 6(27)/2014-HRD); grants from Department of Science and Technology under PURSE scheme (SR/PURSE/Phase 2/25); FIST scheme (SR/FST/LS-II/2019/561) is acknowledged.