Co-Localization of Resistance and Metabolic Quantitative Trait Loci on Carrot Genome Reveals Fungitoxic Terpenes and Related Candidate Genes Associated with the Resistance to Alternaria dauci .
Claude Emmanuel KoutouanValérie Le ClercAnita SuelLatifa HamamaPatricia ClaudelDavid HalterRaymonde BaltenweckPhilippe HugueneyJean-François ChichSitti Anlati MoussaClémentine ChamplainSébastien HuetLinda VoisineSandra PelletierSandrine BalzergueWilfried ChevalierEmmanuel GeoffriauMathilde BriardPublished in: Metabolites (2023)
Alternaria leaf blight, caused by the fungus Alternaria dauci , is the most damaging foliar disease of carrot. Some carrot genotypes exhibit partial resistance to this pathogen and resistance Quantitative Trait Loci (rQTL) have been identified. Co-localization of metabolic QTL and rQTL identified camphene, α-pinene, α-bisabolene, β-cubebene, caryophyllene, germacrene D and α-humulene as terpenes potentially involved in carrot resistance against ALB. By combining genomic and transcriptomic analyses, we identified, under the co-localization regions, terpene-related genes which are differentially expressed between a resistant and a susceptible carrot genotype. These genes include five terpene synthases and twenty transcription factors. In addition, significant mycelial growth inhibition was observed in the presence of α-humulene and caryophyllene.