A receptor-like kinase enhances sunflower resistance to Orobanche cumana.
Pauline DuriezSonia VautrinMarie-Christine AuriacJulia BazerqueMarie-Claude BonifaceCaroline CallotSébastien CarrereStéphane CauetMireille ChabaudFabienne GentouMarta Lopez-SendonClémence ParisPrune Pegot-EspagnetJean-Christophe RousseauxBegoña Pérez-VichLeonardo VelascoHélène BergèsJoël PiquemalStéphane MuñosPublished in: Nature plants (2019)
Orobanche cumana (sunflower broomrape) is an obligate parasitic plant that infects sunflower roots, causing yield losses. Here, by using a map-based cloning strategy, we identified HaOr7-a gene that confers resistance to O. cumana race F-which was found to encode a leucine-rich repeat receptor-like kinase. The complete HAOR7 protein is present in resistant lines of sunflower and prevents O. cumana from connecting to the vascular system of sunflower roots, whereas susceptible lines encode a truncated protein that lacks transmembrane and kinase domains.