(A) The VSRs P19, encoded by Cymbidium ringspot virus, and B2, encoded by flock-house virus, both bind dsRNA but with very different structural requirements. P19 acts as a head-to-tail homodimer that binds to and specifically measures 21 bp duplexes that are the products of DCL4. In contrast, B2 forms a four-helix bundle that binds to one face of an A-form RNA duplex, independent of its length. P19 in complex with siRNA, reprinted by permission from MacMillan Publishers Ltd: Nature (98), copyright 2003, and B2 in complex with dsRNA, adapted by permission from MacMillan Publisher Ltd: Nat. Struct. Mol. Biol. (109), copyright 2005.
(B) Inhibition of DCL4 by the P38 VSR of Turnip crinkle virus reveals the redundant antiviral function of DCL2 which generates 22 nucleotide instead of 21 nucleotide viRNAs in Turnip crinkle virus-infected Arabidopsis. The antiviral activity of DCL2-dependent viRNAs is in turn further compromised by P38, possibly through inhibition of AGO1.
(C) Transgenically expressed VSRs interfere with the Arabidopsis DCL1-dependent miRNA pathway. In contrast to the genetic interactions in Figure 1, these interactions are likely to be physical. VSRs may interfere both with developmental programs mediated by transcription factors (TF) and innate immune pathways negatively regulated by suppressors of defense (SD).
(D) Both wild-type Cucumber mosaic virus (middle) and a version lacking the VSR 2b (CMV-Δ2b, left) induce similarly severe stunting symptoms in dcl2/dcl4 double mutant plants, demonstrating that the VSR is dispensable for infection and disease induction in a host defective in small RNA-directed immunity (Diaz-Pendon et al., 2007). Image courtesy of R. Lu.