Advancing Gene Editing with Plant Viruses

by Chief Editor

Plant scientists are repurposing potyviruses to deliver CRISPR genome-editing tools into crops, potentially bypassing the slow, lab-intensive tissue culture processes previously required for genetic modification. According to research published January 20, 2026, in Horticulture Research, this method uses a diverse group of RNA viruses to move editing instructions through plant tissues, offering a more flexible approach for species that are traditionally difficult to modify.

How Potyviruses Change Genome Editing Delivery

Researchers at the Instituto de Biología Molecular y Celular de Plantas and the Universitat Politècnica de València have demonstrated that potyviruses—a large family of RNA viruses—can be engineered to carry CRISPR RNA guide molecules. Traditional genome editing often relies on stable transformation, a process where plants are edited in a laboratory and then regenerated from isolated cells. As noted by the research team, this older method is technically demanding and often fails to work across a broad range of crop varieties.

How Potyviruses Change Genome Editing Delivery
Did you know?

Potyviruses are one of the largest groups of plant viruses. Because different strains naturally infect different hosts, they provide a vast “toolbox” for scientists to match specific delivery systems to specific agricultural crops.

Testing Viral Vectors in Tobacco and Tomato

The research team validated their system using Nicotiana benthamiana, a model plant, by targeting a gene that causes visible color changes in leaves. By incorporating a mobility element from the Flowering locus T gene, the scientists improved the likelihood that these edits would pass to the next generation. According to the study, the team successfully adapted tobacco rattle virus, tobacco etch virus, turnip mosaic virus, and lettuce mosaic virus to deliver these editing instructions.

Testing Viral Vectors in Tobacco and Tomato

When applied to cultivated tobacco and tomato, the viral vectors achieved substantial editing. While the initial versions of the tobacco etch virus caused severe symptoms in the plants, the researchers engineered milder variants. These refined versions allowed the plants to flower and produce edited offspring, with some rare cases resulting in plants that had successfully dropped the virus entirely.

What Are the Current Technical Barriers?

While the study marks a significant step forward, it does not yet eliminate all hurdles. The plants tested still required pre-existing expression of the Cas12a enzyme to facilitate the edit. Furthermore, the researchers reported that heritable editing—the process of passing the genetic change to seeds—remains a rare occurrence. Current efforts are focused on refining these vectors to improve inheritance rates and developing smaller editing enzymes that could eventually remove the need for stable transformation entirely.

Instituto de Biología Molecular y Celular de Plantas IBMCP (UPV-CSIC)
Pro Tip:

For researchers looking to improve editing efficiency, the structure of the guide RNA is critical. The study found that the specific design of the guide, particularly the inclusion of mobility elements, significantly dictates whether the editing instructions reach the reproductive tissues of the plant.

Future Trends in Virus-Induced Gene Editing

The shift toward virus-induced gene editing represents a move away from DNA-based transformation. By using RNA viruses, scientists aim to create a “transgene-free” future where the genome is edited without leaving behind foreign DNA in the final product. As the technology matures, it may allow for the rapid testing of gene functions in crops that currently resist standard lab protocols. This could accelerate the development of climate-resilient and high-yield varieties by providing a faster, more accessible path to precision breeding.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • What is the main advantage of using potyviruses for gene editing?
    They offer a more flexible delivery system that can be tailored to many different crop species, potentially bypassing the need for slow and difficult tissue culture regeneration.
  • Are these edited plants considered genetically modified organisms (GMOs)?
    The study aims for “transgene-free” editing, which seeks to remove the viral vector and the editing machinery from the final plant, potentially changing how these crops are regulated compared to traditional GMOs.
  • Can any plant be edited using this method?
    Not yet. The researchers note that the technology currently requires the plant to express the Cas12a enzyme, and results vary depending on the host-virus compatibility.

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