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Dive into the research topics where Marcel Prins is active.

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Featured researches published by Marcel Prins.


PLOS Pathogens | 2007

The Ebola virus VP35 protein is a suppressor of RNA silencing.

Joost Haasnoot; Walter de Vries; Ernst-Jan Geutjes; Marcel Prins; Peter de Haan; Ben Berkhout

RNA silencing or interference (RNAi) is a gene regulation mechanism in eukaryotes that controls cell differentiation and developmental processes via expression of microRNAs. RNAi also serves as an innate antiviral defence response in plants, nematodes, and insects. This antiviral response is triggered by virus-specific double-stranded RNA molecules (dsRNAs) that are produced during infection. To overcome antiviral RNAi responses, many plant and insect viruses encode RNA silencing suppressors (RSSs) that enable them to replicate at higher titers. Recently, several human viruses were shown to encode RSSs, suggesting that RNAi also serves as an innate defence response in mammals. Here, we demonstrate that the Ebola virus VP35 protein is a suppressor of RNAi in mammalian cells and that its RSS activity is functionally equivalent to that of the HIV-1 Tat protein. We show that VP35 can replace HIV-1 Tat and thereby support the replication of a Tat-minus HIV-1 variant. The VP35 dsRNA-binding domain is required for this RSS activity. Vaccinia virus E3L protein and influenza A virus NS1 protein are also capable of replacing the HIV-1 Tat RSS function. These findings support the hypothesis that RNAi is part of the innate antiviral response in mammalian cells. Moreover, the results indicate that RSSs play a critical role in mammalian virus replication.


Journal of Virology | 2003

Negative-Strand Tospoviruses and Tenuiviruses Carry a Gene for a Suppressor of Gene Silencing at Analogous Genomic Positions

Etienne Bucher; Titia Sijen; Peter de Haan; Rob Goldbach; Marcel Prins

ABSTRACT Posttranscriptional silencing of a green fluorescent protein (GFP) transgene in Nicotiana benthamiana plants was suppressed when these plants were infected with Tomato spotted wilt virus (TSWV), a plant-infecting member of the Bunyaviridae. Infection with TSWV resulted in complete reactivation of GFP expression, similar to the case for Potato virus Y, but distinct from that for Cucumber mosaic virus, two viruses known to carry genes encoding silencing suppressor proteins. Agrobacterium-based leaf injections with individual TSWV genes identified the NSS gene to be responsible for the RNA silencing-suppressing activity displayed by this virus. The absence of short interfering RNAs in NSS-expressing leaf sectors suggests that the tospoviral NSS protein interferes with the intrinsic RNA silencing present in plants. Suppression of RNA silencing was also observed when the NS3 protein of the Rice hoja blanca tenuivirus, a nonenveloped negative-strand virus, was expressed. These results indicate that plant-infecting negative-strand RNA viruses carry a gene for a suppressor of RNA silencing.


Trends in Microbiology | 1998

The emerging problem of tospovirus infection and nonconventional methods of control

Marcel Prins; Rob Goldbach

The emergence of tospoviruses as a significant problem in the cultivation of many crops around the world makes it vital to develop strategies to restrain these viruses. So far, only a few natural resistance genes suitable for introduction into plant breeding programs have been identified, prompting the exploitation of alternative ways of introducing virus resistance into crop plants, such as genetic modifications.


Molecular Breeding | 2001

The tomato gene Sw5 is a member of the coiled coil, nucleotide binding, leucine-rich repeat class of plant resistance genes and confers resistance to TSWV in tobacco

Mariana I. Spassova; Theo W. Prins; Rolf T. Folkertsma; René M. Klein-Lankhorst; Jacques Hille; Rob Goldbach; Marcel Prins

Tomato spotted wilt virus is an important threat to tomato production worldwide. A single dominant resistance gene locus, Sw5, originating from Lycopersicon peruvianum, has been identified and introgressed in cultivated tomato plants. Here we present the genomic organization of a 35 250 bp fragment of a BAC clone overlapping the Sw5 locus. Two highly homologous (95%) resistance gene candidates were identified within 40 kb of the CT220 marker. The genes, tentatively named Sw5-a and Sw5-b, encode proteins of 1245 and 1246 amino acids, respectively, and are members of the coiled-coil, nucleotide-binding-ARC, leucine-rich repeat group of resistance gene candidates. Promoter and terminator regions of the genes are also highly homologous. Both genes significantly resemble the tomato nematode and aphid resistance gene Mi and, to a lesser extent, Pseudomonas syringae resistance gene Prf. Transformation of Nicotiana tabacum cv. SR1 plants revealed that the Sw5-b gene, but not the Sw5-a gene, is necessary and sufficient for conferring resistance against tomato spotted wilt virus.


Archives of Virology | 1996

RNA-mediated virus resistance in transgenic plants

Marcel Prins; Rob Goldbach

SummaryIn recent years the concept of pathogen-derived resistance (PDR) has been successfully exploited for conferring resistance against viruses in many crop plants. Starting with coat protein-mediated resistance, the range has been broadened to the use of other viral genes as a source of PDR. However, in the course of the efforts, often no clear correlation could be made between expression levels of the transgenes and observed virus resistance levels. Several reports mentioned high resistance levels using genes incapable of producing protein, but in these cases, even plants accumulating high amounts of transgene RNA were not most resistant. To accommodate these unexplained observations, a resistance mechanism involving specific breakdown of viral RNAs has been proposed. Recent progress towards understanding the RNA-mediated resistance mechanism and similarities with the co-suppression phenomenon will be discussed.


Journal of Virology | 2010

Diverging affinity of tospovirus RNA silencing suppressor proteins, NSs, for various RNA duplex molecules.

Esther Schnettler; Hans Hemmes; Rik Huismann; Rob Goldbach; Marcel Prins; Richard Kormelink

ABSTRACT The tospovirus NSs protein was previously shown to suppress the antiviral RNA silencing mechanism in plants. Here the biochemical analysis of NSs proteins from different tospoviruses, using purified NSs or NSs containing cell extracts, is described. The results showed that all tospoviral NSs proteins analyzed exhibited affinity to small double-stranded RNA molecules, i.e., small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) and micro-RNA (miRNA)/miRNA* duplexes. Interestingly, the NSs proteins from tomato spotted wilt virus (TSWV), impatiens necrotic spot virus (INSV), and groundnut ringspot virus (GRSV) also showed affinity to long double-stranded RNA (dsRNA), whereas tomato yellow ring virus (TYRV) NSs did not. The TSWV NSs protein was shown to be capable of inhibiting Dicer-mediated cleavage of long dsRNA in vitro. In addition, it suppressed the accumulation of green fluorescent protein (GFP)-specific siRNAs during coinfiltration with an inverted-repeat-GFP RNA construct in Nicotiana benthamiana. In vivo interference of TSWV NSs in the miRNA pathway was shown by suppression of an enhanced GFP (eGFP) miRNA sensor construct. The ability to stabilize miRNA/miRNA* by different tospovirus NSs proteins in vivo was demonstrated by increased accumulation and detection of both miRNA171c and miRNA171c* in tospovirus-infected N. benthamiana. All together, these data suggest that tospoviruses interfere in the RNA silencing pathway by sequestering siRNA and miRNA/miRNA* molecules before they are uploaded into their respective RNA-induced silencing complexes. The observed affinity to long dsRNA for only a subset of the tospoviruses studied is discussed in light of evolutional divergence and their ancestral relation to the animal-infecting members of the Bunyaviridae.


Molecular Breeding | 2004

High frequency induction of RNA-mediated resistance against Cucumber mosaic virus using inverted repeat constructs

Y.K. Chen; Hendrikus Lohuis; R.W. Goldbach; Marcel Prins

The application of RNA-mediated resistance against Cucumber mosaic virus (CMV) by using single transgene constructs generally results in only a small portion of resistant individuals. Inverted repeat constructs encoding self-complementary double-stranded RNA have been demonstrated a potential way to obtain RNA-mediated resistance at high efficiency. To test this observation as a possible method for high frequency induction of CMV resistance, Nicotiana benthamiana plants were transformed with transgenes designed to produce double strand RNA molecules of CMV RNA 2 or coat protein (CP) gene sequences. Seventy-five percent of the tested R0 plants transformed with an RNA 2-derived inverted repeat construct (1534 nt CMV sequence) showed extreme resistance to CMV, while a lower percentage of resistance (30%) was observed in R0 lines transformed with a similar construct of a shorter viral RNA 2 sequence (490 nt). The resistance level conferred by CP sequences was also efficient by using a dsRNA construct, reaching a level of 50%. Self-pollinated (S1) progenies obtained from most resistant R0 plants all showed resistance levels of 100%, perfectly correlating with the expression of transgenic siRNAs. The results indicate that the use of inverted repeat viral transgenes is a highly efficient approach to obtain CMV resistant transgenic plants. Consequently, only a handful of transgenic plants will have to be generated using such constructs for successful resistance, which enables the implementation of this protocol for crops that are difficult to transform, such as ornamental plants in which CMV is an important pathogen.


Molecular Plant-microbe Interactions | 1996

Engineered RNA-mediated resistance to tomato spotted wilt virus is sequence specific.

Marcel Prins; R. de O. Resende; C. Anker; A. van Schepen; P. de Haan; Rob Goldbach

Transgenic plants were produced that expressed a wide range of randomly chosen sequences of the tripartite tomato spotted wilt virus (TSWV) RNA genome or its complement. Testing the progenies of these plants revealed that only transgenic expression of N or NS(M) gene sequences resulted in resistance to TSWV.


Molecular Plant-microbe Interactions | 1995

Broad resistance to tospoviruses in transgenic tobacco plants expressing three tospoviral nucleoprotein gene sequences.

Marcel Prins; P. de Haan; R. Luyten; M. van Veller; M. van Grinsven; R.W. Goldbach

Transgenic tobacco plants have been obtained expressing nucleoprotein (N) gene sequences of three different tospoviruses known to affect vegetable crops: tomato spotted wilt virus (TSWV), tomato chlorotic spot virus (TCSV), and groundnut ringspot virus (GRSV). The chimeric plant transformation vector used comprised the three viral N gene sequences, each with a copy of the CaMV 35S promoter and the nos terminator. Despite the high levels of homology between the different N gene sequences (74-82%) and the presence of repeated promoter and terminator sequences in this construct, unrearranged copies of this triple N gene construct were stably maintained in both Escherichia coli and Agrobacterium tumefaciens plasmids used during the cloning process, as well as in several generations of transgenic tobacco plants. A transgenic tobacco line was obtained that exhibited high levels of resistance to all three tospoviruses, showing the possibility of producing transgenic plants with a broad resistance to tospoviruses by introducing tandemly cloned viral N gene sequences. DNA analysis of this transgenic plant line shows that the multivirus resistance trait is confined to a single genetic locus, which is very convenient for further breeding purposes.


Trends in Biotechnology | 2003

Broad virus resistance in transgenic plants

Marcel Prins

Viruses are significant threats to agricultural crops worldwide and the limited sources of natural resistance warrant the development of novel resistance sources. Several methods of transgenic protection have been successfully applied, including protein- and RNA-mediated approaches. Increased understanding of the molecular biology of virus infection is starting to bear fruit, enabling specific strategies to be designed for virus resistance in crops.

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Rob Goldbach

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Richard Kormelink

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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P. de Haan

University of Brasília

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M. Storms

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Hans Hemmes

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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D. Peters

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Dick Lohuis

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Etienne Bucher

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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