Niraula Prakash M, Fondong Vincent N
Department of Biological Sciences, Delaware State University, Dover, DE 19901, USA.
Plants (Basel). 2021 Oct 29;10(11):2339. doi: 10.3390/plants10112339.
Plant viruses cause yield losses to crops of agronomic and economic significance and are a challenge to the achievement of global food security. Although conventional plant breeding has played an important role in managing plant viral diseases, it will unlikely meet the challenges posed by the frequent emergence of novel and more virulent viral species or viral strains. Hence there is an urgent need to seek alternative strategies of virus control that can be more readily deployed to contain viral diseases. The discovery in the late 1980s that viral genes can be introduced into plants to engineer resistance to the cognate virus provided a new avenue for virus disease control. Subsequent advances in genomics and biotechnology have led to the refinement and expansion of genetic engineering (GE) strategies in crop improvement. Importantly, many of the drawbacks of conventional breeding, such as long lead times, inability or difficulty to cross fertilize, loss of desirable plant traits, are overcome by GE. Unfortunately, public skepticism towards genetically modified (GM) crops and other factors have dampened the early promise of GE efforts. These concerns are principally about the possible negative effects of transgenes to humans and animals, as well as to the environment. However, with regards to engineering for virus resistance, these risks are overstated given that most virus resistance engineering strategies involve transfer of viral genes or genomic segments to plants. These viral genomes are found in infected plant cells and have not been associated with any adverse effects in humans or animals. Thus, integrating antiviral genes of virus origin into plant genomes is hardly unnatural as suggested by GM crop skeptics. Moreover, advances in deep sequencing have resulted in the sequencing of large numbers of plant genomes and the revelation of widespread endogenization of viral genomes into plant genomes. This has raised the possibility that viral genome endogenization is part of an antiviral defense mechanism deployed by the plant during its evolutionary past. Thus, GM crops engineered for viral resistance would likely be acceptable to the public if regulatory policies were product-based (the North America regulatory model), as opposed to process-based. This review discusses some of the benefits to be gained from adopting GE for virus resistance, as well as the challenges that must be overcome to leverage this technology. Furthermore, regulatory policies impacting virus-resistant GM crops and some success cases of virus-resistant GM crops approved so far for cultivation are discussed.
植物病毒会给具有农艺和经济意义的农作物造成产量损失,对实现全球粮食安全构成挑战。尽管传统植物育种在防治植物病毒病方面发挥了重要作用,但它不太可能应对新出现的、毒性更强的病毒种类或毒株频繁出现所带来的挑战。因此,迫切需要寻求能够更易于部署以控制病毒病的替代防治策略。20世纪80年代末发现可以将病毒基因导入植物以培育对同源病毒的抗性,这为病毒病防治提供了一条新途径。随后基因组学和生物技术的进展导致了作物改良中基因工程(GE)策略的完善和扩展。重要的是,基因工程克服了传统育种的许多缺点,如周期长、无法或难以进行杂交授粉、优良植物性状丧失等。不幸的是,公众对转基因(GM)作物的怀疑态度以及其他因素削弱了基因工程早期的前景。这些担忧主要涉及转基因对人类、动物以及环境可能产生的负面影响。然而,就抗病毒工程而言,鉴于大多数抗病毒工程策略涉及将病毒基因或基因组片段转移到植物中,这些风险被夸大了。这些病毒基因组存在于受感染的植物细胞中,并未与对人类或动物的任何不良影响相关联。因此,将病毒来源的抗病毒基因整合到植物基因组中并非如转基因作物怀疑论者所暗示的那样不自然。此外,深度测序的进展导致大量植物基因组被测序,并揭示了病毒基因组在植物基因组中广泛的内源性化。这增加了病毒基因组内源性化是植物在其进化历史中部署的抗病毒防御机制一部分的可能性。因此,如果监管政策基于产品(北美监管模式)而非基于过程,那么为抗病毒而设计的转基因作物可能会被公众接受。本综述讨论了采用基因工程实现抗病毒所带来的一些益处,以及利用该技术必须克服的挑战。此外,还讨论了影响抗病毒转基因作物的监管政策以及迄今为止批准用于种植的抗病毒转基因作物的一些成功案例。