Login / Signup

A highly diversified NLR cluster in melon contains homologs that confer powdery mildew and aphid resistance.

Nathalie BoissotVeronique ChovelonVincent Rittener-RuffNathalie GiovinazzoPascale MistralMichel PitratMyriam CharpentierChristelle TroadecAbdelhafid BendahmaneCatherine Dogimont
Published in: Horticulture research (2023)
Podosphaera xanthii is the main causal agent of powdery mildew (PM) on Cucurbitaceae. In Cucumis melo , the Pm - w resistance gene, which confers resistance to P . xanthii, is located on chromosome 5 in a cluster of nucleotide-binding leucine-rich repeat receptors (NLRs). We used positional cloning and transgenesis, to isolate the Pm-w WMR 29 gene encoding a coiled-coil NLR (CC-NLR). Pm-w WMR 29 conferred high level of resistance to race 1 of PM and intermediate level of resistance to race 3 of PM. Pm-w WMR 29 turned out to be a homolog of the Aphis gossypii resistance gene Vat-1 PI 161375 . We confirmed that Pm-w WMR 29 did not confer resistance to aphids, while Vat-1 PI 161375 did not confer resistance to PM . We showed that both homologs were included in a highly diversified cluster of NLRs, the Vat cluster. Specific Vat-1 PI 161375 and Pm-w WMR 29 markers were present in 10% to 13% of 678 accessions representative of wild and cultivated melon types worldwide. Phylogenic reconstruction of 34 protein homologs of Vat-1 PI 161375 and Pm-w WMR 29 identified in 24 melon accessions revealed an ancestor with four R65aa-a specific motif in the LRR domain, evolved towards aphid and virus resistance, while an ancestor with five R65aa evolved towards PM resistance. The complexity of the cluster comprising the Vat/Pm-w genes and its diversity in melon suggest that Vat homologs may contribute to the recognition of a broad range of yet to be identified pests and pathogens.
Keyphrases
  • particulate matter
  • air pollution
  • polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons
  • heavy metals
  • water soluble
  • genome wide
  • risk assessment
  • gene expression
  • dna binding
  • genome wide analysis