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Letter

Nature 436, 1040-1043 (18 August 2005) | doi:10.1038/nature03870; Received 4 January 2005; Accepted 6 June 2005

Animal virus replication and RNAi-mediated antiviral silencing in Caenorhabditis elegans

R. Lu1,4, M. Maduro2,4, F. Li1,3, H. W. Li1, G. Broitman-Maduro2, W. X. Li1 & S. W. Ding1,3

  1. Institute for Integrative Genome Biology and Department of Plant Pathology,
  2. Department of Biology, and
  3. Graduate Program for Microbiology, University of California, Riverside, California 92521, USA
  4. *These authors contributed equally to this work

Correspondence to: S. W. Ding1,3 Correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to S.W.D. (Email: dingsw@ucr.edu).

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The worm Caenorhabditis elegans is a model system for studying many aspects of biology, including host responses to bacterial pathogens1, 2, but it is not known to support replication of any virus. Plants and insects encode multiple Dicer enzymes that recognize distinct precursors of small RNAs and may act cooperatively3, 4, 5, 6, 7. However, it is not known whether the single Dicer of worms and mammals is able to initiate the small RNA-guided RNA interference (RNAi) antiviral immunity as occurs in plants8 and insects9. Here we show complete replication of the Flock house virus (FHV) bipartite, plus-strand RNA genome in C. elegans. We show that FHV replication in C. elegans triggers potent antiviral silencing that requires RDE-1, an Argonaute protein10, 11 essential for RNAi mediated by small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) but not by microRNAs. This immunity system is capable of rapid virus clearance in the absence of FHV B2 protein, which acts as a broad-spectrum RNAi inhibitor9, 12 upstream of rde-1 by targeting the siRNA precursor. This work establishes a C. elegans model for genetic studies of animal virus–host interactions and indicates that mammals might use a siRNA pathway as an antiviral response.

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