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OsBGLU19
and
OsBGLU23
regulate disease resistance to bacterial leaf streak in rice
LI Bei-bei, LIU Ying-gao, WU Tao, WANG Ji-peng, XIE Gui-rong, CHU Zhao-hui, DING Xin-hua
2019, 18 (
6
): 1199-1210. DOI:
10.1016/S2095-3119(18)62117-3
Abstract
(
243
)
PDF in ScienceDirect
β-Glucosidase belongs to the glycoside hydrolase I family, which is widely present in multiple species and responds to various biotic and abiotic stresses. In rice, whether β-glucosidase is involved in the interaction between plants and microorganisms is not clear. In this study, we found that the expression of several genes encoding β-glucosidases, including
OsBGLU19
and
OsBGLU23
, were upregulated after inoculation with
Xanthomonas oryzae
pv.
oryzicola
(
Xoc
) and downregulated after inoculation with
X. oryzae
pv.
oryzae
(
Xoo
). The respective insertion mutants of
OsBGLU19
and
OsBGLU23
,
bglu19
and
bglu23
, were more susceptible to
Xoc
infection. The expression of
OsAOS2
, a key gene in the jasmonic acid signal pathway, was dramatically downregulated after inoculation with
Xoc
in the
bglu19
and
bglu23
mutants. Simultaneously, the expression of downstream disease resistance-related genes, such as OsPR1a, OsPR5 and a key transcription factors
OsWRKY72
were obviously downregulated. The resistance mediated by
OsBGLU19
and
OsBGLU23
to bacterial leaf streak is related to disease resistance-related genes above mentioned.
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Sclerotinia
sclerotiorum
virulence is affected by mycelial age via reduction in oxalate biosynthesis
WANG Ji-peng, XU You-ping, ZANG Xian-peng, LI Shuang-sheng, CAI Xin-zhong
2016, 15 (
05
): 1034-1045. DOI:
10.1016/S2095-3119(15)61199-6
Abstract
(
1607
)
PDF in ScienceDirect
Sclerotinia sclerotiorum
is one of the most devastating necrotrophic phytopathogens. Virulence of the hyphae of this fungus at different ages varies significantly. Molecular mechanisms underlying this functional distinction are largely unknown. In this study, we confirmed the effect of mycelial culture time/age on virulence in two host plants and elucidated its molecular and morphological basis. The virulence of the
S. sclerotiorum
mycelia in plants dramatically decreases along with the increase of the mycelial age. Three-day-old mycelia lost the virulence in plants. Comparative proteomics analyses revealed that metabolism pathways were comprehensively reprogrammed to suppress the oxalic acid (OA) accumulation in old mycelia. The oxaloacetate acetylhydrolase (OAH), which catalyzes OA biosynthesis, was identified in the S. sclerotiorum genome. Both gene expression and protein accumulation of OAH in old mycelia were strongly repressed. Moreover,
in planta
OA accumulation was strikingly reduced in old mycelia-inoculated plants compared with young vegetative mycelia-inoculated plants. Furthermore, supply with 10 mmol L
–1
OA enabled the old mycelia infect the host plants, demonstrating that loss of virulence of old mycelia is mainly caused by being unable to accumulate OA. Additionally, aerial mycelia started to develop from 0.5-day-old vegetative mycelia and dominated over 1-day-old mycelia grown on potato dextrose agar plates. They were much smaller in hypha diameter and grew significantly slower than young vegetative mycelia when subcultured, which did not maintain to progenies. Collectively, our results reveal that S
. sclerotiorum
aerial hyphae-dominant old mycelia fail to accumulate OA and thereby lose the virulence in host plants.
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