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Genetic variation in ZmWAX2 confers maize resistance to Fusarium verticillioides.

Peipei MaEnpeng LiuZhirui ZhangTao LiZijian ZhouWen YaoJiafa ChenJianyu WuYufang XuHuiyong Zhang
Published in: Plant biotechnology journal (2023)
Fusarium verticillioides (F. verticillioides) is a widely distributed phytopathogen that incites multiple destructive diseases in maize, posing a grave threat to corn yields and quality worldwide. However, there are few reports of resistance genes to F. verticillioides. Here, we reveal that a combination of two single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) corresponding to ZmWAX2 gene associates with quantitative resistance variations to F. verticillioides in maize through a genome-wide association study. A lack of ZmWAX2 compromises maize resistance to F. verticillioides-caused seed rot, seedling blight and stalk rot by reducing cuticular wax deposition, while the transgenic plants overexpressing ZmWAX2 show significantly increased immunity to F. verticillioides. A natural occurrence of two 7-bp deletions within the promoter increases ZmWAX2 transcription, thus enhancing maize resistance to F. verticillioides. Upon Fusarium stalk rot, ZmWAX2 greatly promotes the yield and grain quality of maize. Our studies demonstrate that ZmWAX2 confers multiple disease resistances caused by F. verticillioides and can serve as an important gene target for the development of F. verticillioides-resistant maize varieties.
Keyphrases
  • genome wide
  • genome wide association study
  • transcription factor
  • risk assessment
  • gene expression
  • emergency department
  • copy number
  • high resolution
  • adverse drug
  • genome wide identification
  • mass spectrometry