Publications by authors named "Eseul Baek"

Article Synopsis
  • Cucumber mosaic virus (CMV) can be transmitted by aphids, and a specific mutant strain (Fny-CMVΔ2b) shows that infected tobacco plants (like Xanthi) develop strong resistance against aphids, reducing their survival and reproduction.
  • The resistance mechanism is linked to the CMV 1a protein, which promotes aphid resistance, while the 2b protein found in wild-type CMV counters this by inhibiting immune responses.
  • Experiments with transgenic tobacco plants revealed that the resistance induced by the 1a protein depends on jasmonic acid (JA)-dependent signaling, as these plants did not show resistance when JA signaling was disrupted.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The transcription factor SHE1 was induced by tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) infection in tobacco cv. Samsun NN (SNN) and SHE1 inhibited TMV accumulation when expressed constitutively. To better understand the role of SHE1 in virus infection, transgenic SNN tobacco plants generated to over-express SHE1 (OEx-SHE1) or silence expression of SHE1 (si-SHE1) were infected with TMV.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The inhibitor of virus replication (IVR) is an inducible protein that is not virus-target-specific and can be induced by several viruses. The GenBank was interrogated for sequences closely related to the tobacco IVR. Various RNA fragments from tobacco, tomato, and potato and their genomic DNA contained IVR-like sequences.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Chrysanthemums () are susceptible to (TMV). TMV-based expression vectors have been used in high-throughput experiments for production of foreign protein in plants and also expressing green fluorescent protein (GFP) to allow visualization of TMV movement. Here, we used TMV expressing the GFP to examine the infection of chrysanthemum by a TMV-based expression vector.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

To facilitate quantification of gene expression changes in virus-infected tobacco plants, eight housekeeping genes were evaluated for their stability of expression during infection by one of three systemically-infecting viruses (cucumber mosaic virus, potato virus X, potato virus Y) or a hypersensitive-response-inducing virus (tobacco mosaic virus; TMV) limited to the inoculated leaf. Five reference-gene validation programs were used to establish the order of the most stable genes for the systemically-infecting viruses as ribosomal protein L25 > β-Tubulin > Actin, and the least stable genes Ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme (UCE) < PP2A < GAPDH. For local infection by TMV, the most stable genes were EF1α > Cysteine protease > Actin, and the least stable genes were GAPDH < PP2A < UCE.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Cymbidium mosaic virus (CymMV)-induced expressed sequence tag (EST) clones from Chenopodium amaranticolor were identified. CymMV was mechanically inoculated onto C. amaranticolor, and local lesion symptoms were observed.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF