Plant viruses and new perspectives in cross-protection
Résumé
Cross-protection in plants is the phenomenon whereby a plant preinoculated with a mild virus strain becomes resistant to subsequent inoculation by a related severe strain. It has been used on a large scale in cases where no resistant plants are available. Although several hypotheses have been proposed to explain the molecular mechanism underlying cross-protection, no single hypothesis can account for all the data obtained. Recently, a phenomenon akin to cross-protection has been achieved in transformed plants harboring the cDNA of a part of a viral RNA genome. These results obtained by genetic engineering raise new hopes for obtaining plants resistant to virus infection.