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Dive into the research topics where Dick Lohuis is active.

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Featured researches published by Dick Lohuis.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Tomato yellow leaf curl virus resistance by Ty-1 involves increased cytosine methylation of viral genomes and is compromised by cucumber mosaic virus infection

Patrick Butterbach; Maarten G. Verlaan; Annette Dullemans; Dick Lohuis; Richard G. F. Visser; Yuling Bai; Richard Kormelink

Significance Tomato yellow leaf curl virus disease causes enormous yield losses in tomato production worldwide and is caused by different begomoviruses, with tomato yellow leaf curl virus (TYLCV) as the most important one. Recently, we have cloned to our knowledge the first resistance gene against TYLCV, namely Ty-1, which encodes an RNA-dependent RNA polymerase and has unveiled a new class of resistance genes. Here we provide data that indicate that Ty-1 confers resistance to TYLCV and other geminiviruses by enhancing transcriptional gene silencing, a part of the antiviral RNAi defense mechanism. Furthermore, we show that this resistance is compromised by infection with cucumber mosaic virus, another important and widely distributed RNA virus, likely due to its ability to suppress RNAi at different levels. Tomato yellow leaf curl virus (TYLCV) and related begomoviruses are a major threat to tomato production worldwide and, to protect against these viruses, resistance genes from different wild tomato species are introgressed. Recently, the Ty-1 resistance gene was identified, shown to code for an RNA-dependent RNA polymerase and to be allelic with Ty-3. Here we show that upon TYLCV challenging of resistant lines carrying Ty-1 or Ty-3, low virus titers were detected concomitant with the production of relatively high levels of siRNAs whereas, in contrast, susceptible tomato Moneymaker (MM) revealed higher virus titers but lower amounts of siRNAs. Comparative analysis of the spatial genomic siRNA distribution showed a consistent and subtle enrichment for siRNAs derived from the V1 and C3 genes in Ty-1 and Ty-3. In plants containing Ty-2 resistance the virus was hardly detectable, but the siRNA profile resembled the one observed in TYLCV-challenged susceptible tomato (MM). Furthermore, a relative hypermethylation of the TYLCV V1 promoter region was observed in genomic DNA collected from Ty-1 compared with that from (MM). The resistance conferred by Ty-1 was also effective against the bipartite tomato severe rugose begomovirus, where a similar genome hypermethylation of the V1 promoter region was discerned. However, a mixed infection of TYLCV with cucumber mosaic virus compromised the resistance. The results indicate that Ty-1 confers resistance to geminiviruses by increasing cytosine methylation of viral genomes, suggestive of enhanced transcriptional gene silencing. The mechanism of resistance and its durability toward geminiviruses under natural field conditions is discussed.


Molecular Plant Pathology | 2013

Tsw gene-based resistance is triggered by a functional RNA silencing suppressor protein of the Tomato spotted wilt virus

Dryas de Ronde; Patrick Butterbach; Dick Lohuis; Marcio Hedil; Jan W. M. van Lent; Richard Kormelink

As a result of contradictory reports, the avirulence (Avr) determinant that triggers Tsw gene-based resistance in Capsicum annuum against the Tomato spotted wilt virus (TSWV) is still unresolved. Here, the N and NSs genes of resistance-inducing (RI) and resistance-breaking (RB) isolates were cloned and transiently expressed in resistant Capsicum plants to determine the identity of the Avr protein. It was shown that the NSs(RI) protein triggered a hypersensitive response (HR) in Tsw-containing Capsicum plants, but not in susceptible Capsicum, whereas no HR was discerned after expression of the N(RI) (/) (RB) protein, or when NSs(RB) was expressed. Although NSs(RI) was able to suppress the silencing of a functional green fluorescence protein (GFP) construct during Agrobacterium tumefaciens transient assays on Nicotiana benthamiana, NSs(RB) had lost this capacity. The observation that RB isolates suppressed local GFP silencing during an infection indicated a recovery of RNA silencing suppressor activity for the NSs protein or the presence of another RNA interference (RNAi) suppressor. The role of NSs as RNA silencing suppressor and Avr determinant is discussed in the light of a putative interplay between RNAi and the natural Tsw resistance gene.


Molecular Plant Pathology | 2014

Analysis of Tomato spotted wilt virus NSs protein indicates the importance of the N-terminal domain for avirulence and RNA silencing suppression

Dryas de Ronde; Adrien Pasquier; Su Ying; Patrick Butterbach; Dick Lohuis; Richard Kormelink

Recently, Tomato spotted wilt virus (TSWV) nonstructural protein NSs has been identified unambiguously as an avirulence (Avr) determinant for Tomato spotted wilt (Tsw)-based resistance. The observation that NSs from two natural resistance-breaking isolates had lost RNA silencing suppressor (RSS) activity and Avr suggested a link between the two functions. To test this, a large set of NSs mutants was generated by alanine substitutions in NSs from resistance-inducing wild-type strains (NSs(RI) ), amino acid reversions in NSs from resistance-breaking strains (NSs(RB)), domain deletions and swapping. Testing these mutants for their ability to suppress green fluorescent protein (GFP) silencing and to trigger a Tsw-mediated hypersensitive response (HR) revealed that the two functions can be separated. Changes in the N-terminal domain were found to be detrimental for both activities and indicated the importance of this domain, additionally supported by domain swapping between NSs(RI) and NSs(RB). Swapping domains between the closely related Tospovirus Groundnut ringspot virus (GRSV) NSs and TSWV NSs(RI) showed that Avr functionality could not simply be transferred between species. Although deletion of the C-terminal domain rendered NSs completely dysfunctional, only a few single-amino-acid mutations in the C-terminus affected both functions. Mutation of a GW/WG motif (position 17/18) rendered NSs completely dysfunctional for RSS and Avr activity, and indicated a putative interaction between NSs and Argonaute 1 (AGO1), and its importance in TSWV virulence and viral counter defence against RNA interference.


Journal of General Virology | 2009

Binding of small interfering RNA molecules is crucial for RNA interference suppressor activity of rice hoja blanca virus NS3 in plants

Hans Hemmes; Lucas Kaaij; Dick Lohuis; Marcel Prins; Rob Goldbach; Esther Schnettler

The NS3 protein of rice hoja blanca virus represents a viral suppressor of RNA interference (RNAi) that sequesters small interfering (si)RNAs in vitro. To determine whether this siRNA binding property is the critical determinant for the suppressor activity of NS3, NS3 was altered by alanine point mutations and the resulting mutant proteins were tested for both siRNA binding ability and RNAi suppressor activity in plants. Alanine substitutions of lysine residues at positions 173-175 resulted in mutant proteins that lost both their affinity for siRNAs and their RNAi suppressor activity in planta. This indicates that siRNA binding of NS3 is indeed essential for the suppressor function of NS3 and that residues at positions 173-175 are involved in the siRNA binding and suppressor activities.


Journal of Virological Methods | 2010

Potato virus X and Tobacco mosaic virus-based vectors compatible with the Gateway™ cloning system

Cristiano Lacorte; Simone G. Ribeiro; Dick Lohuis; Rob Goldbach; Marcel Prins

Virus-based expression vectors are important tools for high-level production of foreign proteins and for gene function analysis through virus induced gene silencing. To exploit further their advantages as fast, high yield replicons, a set of vectors was produced by converting and adapting Potato virus X (PVX) and Tobacco mosaic virus (TMV)-based vectors to allow easy cloning of foreign sequences by the Gateway cloning system. Target genes were cloned efficiently by recombination and successfully expressed in Nicotiana benthamiana following inoculation by Agrobacterium (agroinfection). Using green fluorescent protein (GFP) as marker, high-level expression with both PVX-GW and TMV-GW vectors was confirmed. A Gateway inserted phytoene desaturase gene (pds) fragment in PVX-GW and TMV-GW vectors (PVX-GW-PDS and TMC-GW-PDS), induced gene silencing of the endogenous pds gene in N. benthamiana as evidenced by chlorotic leaves. The PVX-GW vector was adapted further by cloning the GFP gene upstream of the Gateway sequences, allowing the easy production of GFP fusions after recombination of a target gene. Subcellular localization of resulting GFP fusion was validated by recombining and expressing the coat protein gene from Tomato chlorotic mottle virus, revealing its nuclear localization. A PVX-GW transient expression assay of a nucleocapsid protein gene fragment of Tomato spotted wilt virus and of a single chain antibody against this protein was shown to confer effective resistance to TSWV infection.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Analysis of Tospovirus NSs Proteins in Suppression of Systemic Silencing.

Marcio Hedil; Mark G. Sterken; Dryas de Ronde; Dick Lohuis; Richard Kormelink

RNA silencing is a sequence-specific gene regulation mechanism that in plants also acts antiviral. In order to counteract antiviral RNA silencing, viruses have evolved RNA silencing suppressors (RSS). In the case of tospoviruses, the non-structural NSs protein has been identified as the RSS. Although the tomato spotted wilt virus (TSWV) tospovirus NSs protein has been shown to exhibit affinity to long and small dsRNA molecules, its ability to suppress the non-cell autonomous part of RNA silencing has only been studied to a limited extent. Here, the NSs proteins of TSWV, groundnut ringspot virus (GRSV) and tomato yellow ring virus (TYRV), representatives for three distinct tospovirus species, have been studied on their ability and strength to suppress local and systemic silencing. A system has been developed to quantify suppression of GFP silencing in Nicotiana benthamiana 16C lines, to allow a comparison of relative RNA silencing suppressor strength. It is shown that NSs of all three tospoviruses are suppressors of local and systemic silencing. Unexpectedly, suppression of systemic RNA silencing by NSsTYRV was just as strong as those by NSsTSWV and NSsGRSV, even though NSsTYRV was expressed in lower amounts. Using the system established, a set of selected NSsTSWV gene constructs mutated in predicted RNA binding domains, as well as NSs from TSWV isolates 160 and 171 (resistance breakers of the Tsw resistance gene), were analyzed for their ability to suppress systemic GFP silencing. The results indicate another mode of RNA silencing suppression by NSs that acts further downstream the biogenesis of siRNAs and their sequestration. The findings are discussed in light of the affinity of NSs for small and long dsRNA, and recent mutant screen of NSsTSWV to map domains required for RSS activity and triggering of Tsw-governed resistance.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Analysis of the A-U rich hairpin from the intergenic region of tospovirus S RNA as target and inducer of RNA silencing

Marcio Hedil; Afshin Hassani-Mehraban; Dick Lohuis; Richard Kormelink

Earlier work indicated that Tomato spotted wilt virus (TSWV) messenger transcripts, and not the (anti)genomic RNAs, are targeted by the RNA silencing machinery. Here, the predicted AU-rich hairpin (HP) structure encoded by the intergenic region (IGR) of the TSWV S RNA, and present at the 3′ end of viral mRNAs, was analyzed as a target and inducer for RNA silencing. Virus-derived siRNAs (vsiRNAs) purified from virus infected plants were found to derive from all three genomic RNA segments but predominantly the ambisense M and S RNAs. Further profiling on the S RNA sequence revealed that vsiRNAs were found from almost the entire S RNA sequence, except the IGR from where hardly any vsiRNAs were found. Similar profiles were observed with the distantly related Tomato yellow ring tospovirus (TYRV). Dicer cleavage assays using Drosophila melanogaster (Dm) embryo extracts showed that synthetic transcripts of the IGR-HP region were recognized as substrate for Dicer. Transient agroinfiltration assays of a GFP-sensor construct containing the IGR-HP sequence at its 3′ UTR (GFP-HP) did not show more rapid/strong silencing and profiling of the corresponding siRNAs, generated outside the context of a viral infection, still revealed relatively low levels of IGR-HP-derived siRNAs. These data support the idea that the IGR-HP is a weak inducer of RNA silencing and only plays a minor role in the amplification of a strong antiviral RNAi response.


Journal of General Virology | 2005

Phage display-selected single chain antibodies confer high levels of resistance against Tomato spotted wilt virus

Marcel Prins; Dick Lohuis; Arjen Schots; Rob Goldbach


Journal of General Virology | 1993

Sequence data to settle the taxonomic position of bean common mosaic virus and blackeye cowpea mosaic virus isolates

Jawaid A. Khan; Dick Lohuis; Rob Goldbach; Jeanne Dijkstra


Protein Expression and Purification | 2007

The nucleoprotein of Tomato spotted wilt virus as protein tag for easy purification and enhanced production of recombinant proteins in plants.

Cristiano Lacorte; Simone G. Ribeiro; Dick Lohuis; Rob Goldbach; Marcel Prins

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Richard Kormelink

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Marcel Prins

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Dryas de Ronde

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Marcio Hedil

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Rob Goldbach

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Mark G. Sterken

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Patrick Butterbach

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Hans Hemmes

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Lucas Kaaij

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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R.W. Goldbach

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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