02852naa a2200373 a 450000100080000000500110000800800410001902200140006002400170007410000200009124501010011126000090021230000230022152019280024465000180217265000120219065000120220265000110221465000090222565000100223465300180224465300130226265300110227565300120228665300110229865300090230965300110231870000180232970000160234770000190236370000230238270000240240577300490242910043252015-09-01 2014 bl uuuu u00u1 u #d a1932-62037 a10.13712DOI1 aABREU, P. M. V. aCarica papaya MicroRNAs Are Responsive to Papaya meleira virus Infection.h[electronic resource] c2014 a13 p.cil., color. aMicroRNAs are implicated in the response to biotic stresses. Papaya meleira virus (PMeV) is the causal agent of sticky disease, a commercially important pathology in papaya for which there are currently no resistant varieties. PMeV has a number of unusual features, such as residence in the laticifers of infected plants, and the response of the papaya to PMeV infection is not well understood. The protein levels of 20S proteasome subunits increase during PMeV infection, suggesting that proteolysis could be an important aspect of the plant defense response mechanism. To date, 10,598 plant microRNAs have been identified in the Plant miRNAs Database, but only two, miR162 and miR403, are from papaya. In this study, known plant microRNA sequences were used to search for potential microRNAs in the papaya genome. A total of 462 microRNAs, representing 72 microRNA families, were identified. The expression of 11 microRNAs, whose targets are involved in 20S and 26S proteasomal degradation and in other stress response pathways, was compared by real-time PCR in healthy and infected papaya leaf tissue. We found that the expression of miRNAs involved in proteasomal degradation increased in response to very low levels of PMeV titre and decreased as the viral titre increased. In contrast, miRNAs implicated in the plant response to biotic stress decreased their expression at very low level of PMeV and increased at high PMeV levels. Corroborating with this results, analysed target genes for this miRNAs had their expression modulated in a dependent manner. This study represents a comprehensive identification of conserved miRNAs inpapaya. The data presented here might help to complement the available molecular and genomic tools for the study of papaya. The differential expression of some miRNAs and identifying their target genes will be helpful for understanding the regulation and interaction of PMeV and papaya. aCarica papaya aDisease aMeleira aMiRNAs aPMeV aVirus aCarica papaya aDoenças aMamão aMeleira aMiRNAs aPMeV aVírus1 aGASPAR, C. G.1 aBUSS, D. S.1 aVENTURA, J. A.1 aFERREIRA, P. C. G.1 aFERNANDES, P. M. B. tPLOS ONEgv. 9, issue 7, p. 1-13, july 2014.