<p>Section A Plant virus-host interaction</p> <p>1. Host-encoded miRNAs in plant-virus interactions—What’s new</p> <p>Zhimin Yin</p> <p>2. Plant nonhost resistance against viruses: Current status and future prospects</p> <p>Xiaofei Cheng, Yameng Luan, and Xiaoyun Wu</p> <p>3. Viral movement-cellular protein interaction</p> <p>Neelam Yadav, Dinesh Kumar Yadav, Sarika Yadav, and S M Paul Khurana</p> <p>4. Virus latency: Heterogeneity of host-virus interaction in shaping the virosphere</p> <p>Gilbert Nchongboh Chofong, Janos Minarovits, and Katja R. Richert-Poggeler</p> <p>5. Functional biology of potato-virus interactions</p> <p>A. Jeevalatha, S.K. Chakrabarti, and S M Paul Khurana</p> <p>6. Virus-host interactome of Potyviridae</p> <p>Elangovan Sangeetha and Tennyson Jebasingh</p> <p>7. Geminiviruses and their interaction with host proteins</p> <p>Imran Amin, Nasim Ahmed, Hira Kamal, and Shahid Mansoor</p> <p>8. Factors controlling the fate of tomato yellow leaf curl virus (TYLCV) in its vector, the whitefly vector Bemisia tabaci</p> <p>Henryk Czosnek, Rena Gorovits, and Murad Ghanim</p> <p>9. The interaction between begomoviruses and host proteins: Who determines the pathogenicity of begomoviruses</p> <p>Megha Mishra, Filza Fatma, Shamresh Anand, Dinesh Kumar Singh, Pradeep Sharma, R.K. Gaur, andRakesh Kumar Verma</p> <p>10. Multifunctional role of 2b protein in pathogenesis of the viruses under the family Bromoviridae</p> <p>Daliyamol, Anirban Roy, Sunil Mukherjee, Kappei Kobayashi, and Bikash Mandal</p> <p>Section B Plant virus evolution and diversity</p> <p>11. Evolution and diversity of plant RNA viruses</p> <p>Reshu Chauhan, Surabhi Awasthi, and Raghvendra Pratap Narayan</p> <p>12. Plant virus: Diversity and ecology</p> <p>S.U. Mohammed Riyaz, D. Michael Immanuel Jesse, and K. Kathiravan</p> <p>Section C Plant virus management</p> <p>13. Molecular biology of antiviral arms race between plants and viruses</p> <p>Devendran Ragunathan, Ved Prakash, and R. Vinoth Kumar</p> <p>14. Control of plant pathogenic viruses through interference with insect transmission</p> <p>Ornela Chase, Inmaculada Ferriol, and Juan Jose Lopez-Moya</p> <p>15. Small RNA-mediated begomoviral resistance in plants: Micro in size but mega in function</p> <p>Mirza S. Baig and Jawaid A. Khan</p> <p>16. Managing chili leaf curl disease through RNAi based strategies</p> <p>Anurag Kumar Sahu and Neeti Sanan Mishra</p> <p>17. CRISPR/Cas9: A magic bullet to deal with plant viruses</p> <p>Garima Singroha, Om Prakash Gupta, R.K. Gaur, and Pradeep Sharma</p> <p>18. Evaluation of the reaction of cereal cultivars to viruses as a preliminary step in plant health</p> <p>management</p> <p>Antoniy Stoev</p> <p>19. Ecological methods to control viral damages in tomatoes</p> <p>Nikolay Petrov, Mariya Stoyanova, and R.K. Gaur</p> <p>20. Overcoming limitations of resistance breeding in Carica papaya L. against papaya ringspot virus—Recent approaches</p> <p>Sunil K. Sharma and Savarni Tripathi</p> <p>21. Diversity analysis of begomoviruses infecting papaya and its mechanisms of resistance</p> <p>Ritesh Mishra, Priyanka Varun, Aradhana Lucky Hans, and Sangeeta Saxena</p> <p>22. Plant viruses as an engineered nanovehicle (PVENVs)</p> <p>Avinash Marwal and R.K. Gaur</p> <p><br> </p>