Disease: Plant viral diseases

Tracking of Tobacco Mosaic Virus in Taxonomically Different Plant Fungi

Scientists discovered that tobacco mosaic virus can infect and replicate inside some fungal pathogens like Botrytis and Verticillium, which are major crop diseases. Interestingly, when viruses infect these fungi, the fungi activate their own defense mechanisms to fight the virus, yet still maintain their ability to cause disease in plants. This discovery opens new possibilities for using plant viruses as tools to study and potentially control harmful fungal pathogens on crops.

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Expression and antiviral application of exogenous lectin (griffithsin) in sweetpotatoes

Scientists successfully created sweetpotato plants that produce griffithsin, a powerful antiviral protein found in marine algae. When these modified plants were grown in fields, they resisted a devastating sweetpotato virus disease that normally destroys crops. Interestingly, the virus-fighting mechanism works differently in plants than in animals—instead of directly blocking the virus, griffithsin triggers the plant’s own natural antiviral defense genes.

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