Transfer of tomato immune receptor Ve1 confers Ave1-dependent Verticillium resistance in tobacco and cotton

被引:39
|
作者
Song, Yin [1 ]
Liu, Linlin [2 ]
Wang, Yidong [1 ]
Valkenburg, Dirk-Jan [1 ]
Zhang, Xianlong [2 ]
Zhu, Longfu [2 ]
Thomma, Bart P. H. J. [1 ]
机构
[1] Wageningen Univ, Lab Phytopathol, Wageningen, Netherlands
[2] Huazhong Agr Univ, Natl Key Lab Crop Genet Improvement, Wuhan, Hubei, Peoples R China
关键词
receptor-like protein; verticillium dahliae; vascular wilt; cell surface receptor; pathogen resistance; AXONOPODIS PV. CITRI; PATHOGEN XANTHOMONAS-AXONOPODIS; PATTERN-RECOGNITION RECEPTOR; QUANTITATIVE TRAIT LOCI; WILT RESISTANCE; DISEASE RESISTANCE; INTERFAMILY TRANSFER; PLANT IMMUNITY; GENES; DAHLIAE;
D O I
10.1111/pbi.12804
中图分类号
Q81 [生物工程学(生物技术)]; Q93 [微生物学];
学科分类号
071005 ; 0836 ; 090102 ; 100705 ;
摘要
Verticillium wilts caused by soilborne fungal species of the Verticillium genus are economically important plant diseases that affect a wide range of host plants and are notoriously difficult to combat. Perception of pathogen(-induced) ligands by plant immune receptors is a key component of plant innate immunity. In tomato, race-specific resistance to Verticillium wilt is governed by the cell surface-localized immune receptor Ve1 through recognition of the effector protein Ave1 that is secreted by race 1 strains of Verticillium spp. It was previously demonstrated that transgenic expression of tomato Ve1 in the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana leads to Verticillium wilt resistance. Here, we investigated whether tomato Ve1 can confer Verticillium resistance when expressed in the crop species tobacco (Nicotiana tabcum) and cotton (Gossypium hirsutum). We show that transgenic tobacco and cotton plants constitutively expressing tomato Ve1 exhibit enhanced resistance against Verticillium wilt in an Ave1-dependent manner. Thus, we demonstrate that the functionality of tomato Ve1 in Verticillium wilt resistance through recognition of the Verticillium effector Ave1 is retained after transfer to tobacco and cotton, implying that the Ve1-mediated immune signalling pathway is evolutionary conserved across these plant species. Moreover, our results suggest that transfer of tomato Ve1 across sexually incompatible plant species can be exploited in breeding programmes to engineer Verticillium wilt resistance.
引用
收藏
页码:638 / 648
页数:11
相关论文
共 42 条
  • [21] Constitutive expression of a novel antimicrobial protein, Hcm1, confers resistance to both Verticillium and Fusarium wilts in cotton
    Zhiyuan Zhang
    Jun Zhao
    Lingyun Ding
    Lifang Zou
    Yurong Li
    Gongyou Chen
    Tianzhen Zhang
    Scientific Reports, 6
  • [22] Constitutive expression of a novel antimicrobial protein, Hcm1, confers resistance to both Verticillium and Fusarium wilts in cotton
    Zhang, Zhiyuan
    Zhao, Jun
    Ding, Lingyun
    Zou, Lifang
    Li, Yurong
    Chen, Gongyou
    Zhang, Tianzhen
    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2016, 6
  • [23] Cotton peroxisome-localized lysophospholipase counteracts the toxic effects of Verticillium dahliae NLP1 and confers wilt resistance
    Wang, Guilin
    Wang, Xinyu
    Song, Jian
    Wang, Haitang
    Ruan, Chaofeng
    Zhang, Wenshu
    Guo, Zhan
    Li, Weixi
    Guo, Wangzhen
    PLANT JOURNAL, 2023, 115 (02): : 452 - 469
  • [24] Island Cotton Gbve1 Gene Encoding A Receptor-Like Protein Confers Resistance to Both Defoliating and Non-Defoliating Isolates of Verticillium dahliae
    Zhang, Baolong
    Yang, Yuwen
    Chen, Tianzi
    Yu, Wengui
    Liu, Tingli
    Li, Hongjuan
    Fan, Xiaohui
    Ren, Yongzhe
    Shen, Danyu
    Liu, Li
    Dou, Daolong
    Chang, Youhong
    PLOS ONE, 2012, 7 (12):
  • [25] Expression of Arabidopsis NPR1 in Transgenic Cotton Confers Resistance to Non-defoliating Isolates of Verticillium dahliae but not the Defoliating Isolates
    Parkhi, Vilas
    Kumar, Vinod
    Campbell, LeAnne M.
    Bell, Alois A.
    Rathore, Keerti S.
    JOURNAL OF PHYTOPATHOLOGY, 2010, 158 (11-12) : 822 - 825
  • [26] The island cotton NBS-LRR gene GbaNA1 confers resistance to the non-race 1 Verticillium dahliae isolate Vd991
    Li, Nan-Yang
    Ma, Xue-Feng
    Short, Dylan P. G.
    Li, Ting-Gang
    Zhou, Lei
    Gui, Yue-Jing
    Kong, Zhi-Qiang
    Zhang, Dan-Dan
    Zhang, Wen-Qi
    Li, Jun-Jiao
    Subbarao, Krishna V.
    Chen, Jie-Yin
    Dai, Xiao-Feng
    MOLECULAR PLANT PATHOLOGY, 2018, 19 (06) : 1466 - 1479
  • [27] Host-induced gene silencing of a regulator of G protein signalling gene (VdRGS1) confers resistance to Verticillium wilt in cotton
    Xu, Jun
    Wang, Xinyu
    Li, Yongqing
    Zeng, Jianguo
    Wang, Guilin
    Deng, Chaoyang
    Guo, Wangzhen
    PLANT BIOTECHNOLOGY JOURNAL, 2018, 16 (09) : 1629 - 1643
  • [28] Fol-milR1, a pathogenicity factor of Fusarium oxysporum, confers tomato wilt disease resistance by impairing host immune responses
    Ji, Hui-Min
    Mao, Hui-Ying
    Li, Si-Jian
    Feng, Tao
    Zhang, Zhao-Yang
    Cheng, Lu
    Luo, Shu-Jie
    Borkovich, Katherine A.
    Ouyang, Shou-Qiang
    NEW PHYTOLOGIST, 2021, 232 (02) : 705 - 718
  • [29] Transfer of a mutant plant glutamate 1-semialdehyde aminotransferase gene from the nuclear to the plastid genome confers gabaculine resistance in tobacco
    Bellucci, Michele
    De Marchis, Francesca
    Pompa, Andrea
    Micheli, Maurizio
    Gardi, Tiziano
    Rosellini, Daniele
    PLANT CELL TISSUE AND ORGAN CULTURE, 2019, 137 (02) : 411 - 416
  • [30] Transfer of a mutant plant glutamate 1-semialdehyde aminotransferase gene from the nuclear to the plastid genome confers gabaculine resistance in tobacco
    Michele Bellucci
    Francesca De Marchis
    Andrea Pompa
    Maurizio Micheli
    Tiziano Gardi
    Daniele Rosellini
    Plant Cell, Tissue and Organ Culture (PCTOC), 2019, 137 : 411 - 416