17 research outputs found
Durable broad-spectrum powdery mildew resistance in pea er1 plants is conferred by natural loss-of-function mutations in PsMLO1
Loss-of-function alleles of plant-specific MLO (Mildew Resistance Locus O) genes confer broad-spectrum powdery mildew resistance in monocot (barley) and dicot (Arabidopsis thaliana, tomato) plants. Recessively inherited powdery mildew resistance in pea (Pisum sativum) er1 plants is, in many aspects, reminiscent of mlo-conditioned powdery mildew immunity, yet the underlying gene has remained elusive to date. We used a polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-based approach to amplify a candidate MLO cDNA from wild-type (Er1) pea. Sequence analysis of the PsMLO1 candidate gene in two natural er1 accessions from Asia and two er1-containing pea cultivars with a New World origin revealed, in each case, detrimental nucleotide polymorphisms in PsMLO1, suggesting that PsMLO1 is Er1. We corroborated this hypothesis by restoration of susceptibility on transient expression of PsMLO1 in the leaves of two resistant er1 accessions. Orthologous legume MLO genes from Medicago truncatula and Lotus japonicus likewise complemented the er1 phenotype. All tested er1 genotypes showed unaltered colonization with the arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus, Glomus intraradices, and with nitrogen-fixing rhizobial bacteria. Our data demonstrate that PsMLO1 is Er1 and that the loss of PsMLO1 function conditions durable broad-spectrum powdery mildew resistance in pea
Synthetic plant promoters containing defined regulatory elements provide novel insights into pathogen- and wound- induced signaling
Pathogen-inducible plant promoters contain multiple cis-acting elements, only some of which may contribute to pathogen inducibility. Therefore, we made defined synthetic promoters containing tetramers of only a single type of element and present evidence that a range of cis-acting elements (boxes W1, W2, GCC, JERE, S, Gst1, and D) can mediate local gene expression in planta after pathogen attack. The expression patterns of the promoters were monitored during interactions with a number of pathogens, including compatible, incompatible, and nonhost interactions. Interestingly, there were major differences in the inducibilities of the various promoters with the pathogens tested as well as differences in the speed of induction and in the basal expression levels. We also show that defense signaling is largely conserved across species boundaries at the cis-acting element level, Many of these promoters also direct local wound induced expression, and this provides evidence for the convergence of resistance gene, nonhost, and wound responses at the level of the promoter elements. We have used these cis-acting elements to construct improved synthetic promoters and show the effects of varying the number, order, and spacing of such elements. These promoters are valuable additions to the study of signaling and transcriptional activation during plant-pathogen interactions
Naturally occurring broad-spectrum powdery mildew resistance in a Central American tomato accession is caused by loss of mlo function
The resistant cherry tomato (Solanum lycopersicum var.
cerasiforme) line LC-95, derived from an accession collected
in Ecuador, harbors a natural allele (ol-2) that confers
broad-spectrum and recessively inherited resistance to
powdery mildew (Oidium neolycopersici). As both the genetic
and phytopathological characteristics of ol-2–mediated
resistance are reminiscent of powdery mildew immunity
conferred by loss-of-function mlo alleles in barley and Arabidopsis,
we initiated a candidate-gene approach to clone Ol-
2. A tomato Mlo gene (SlMlo1) with high sequence-relatedness
to barley Mlo and Arabidopsis AtMLO2 mapped to the
chromosomal region harboring the Ol-2 locus. Complementation
experiments using transgenic tomato lines as
well as virus-induced gene silencing assays suggested that
loss of SlMlo1 function is responsible for powdery mildew
resistance conferred by ol-2. In progeny of a cross between
a resistant line bearing ol-2 and the susceptible tomato cultivar
Moneymaker, a 19-bp deletion disrupting the SlMlo1
coding region cosegregated with resistance. This polymorphism
results in a frameshift and, thus, a truncated nonfunctional
SlMlo1 protein. Our findings reveal the second
example of a natural mlo mutant that possibly arose postdomestication,
suggesting that natural mlo alleles might be
evolutionarily short-lived due to fitness costs related to loss
of mlo function