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Identification of the Function of the Pathogenesis-Related Protein GmPR1L in the Resistance of Soybean to Cercospora sojina Hara.

Yeyao DuNooral AminNaveed AhmadHanzhu ZhangYe ZhangYang SongSujie FanPiwu Wang
Published in: Genes (2023)
Pathogenesis-related proteins, often used as molecular markers of disease resistance in plants, can enable plants to obtain systemic resistance. In this study, a gene encoding a pathogenesis-related protein was identified via RNA-seq sequencing analysis performed at different stages of soybean seedling development. Because the gene sequence showed the highest similarity with PR1L sequence in soybean, the gene was named GmPR1-9-like ( GmPR1L ). GmPR1L was either overexpressed or silenced in soybean seedlings through Agrobacterium -mediated transformation to examine the resistance of soybean to infection caused by Cercospora sojina Hara. The results revealed that GmPR1L -overexpressing soybean plants had a smaller lesion area and improved resistance to C. sojina infection, whereas GmPR1L -silenced plants had low resistance to C. sojina infection. Fluorescent real-time PCR indicated that overexpression of GmPR1L induced the expression of genes such as WRKY , PR9 , and PR14 , which are more likely to be co-expressed during C. sojina infection. Furthermore, the activities of SOD, POD, CAT, and PAL were significantly increased in GmPR1L -overexpressing soybean plants after seven days of infection. The resistance of the GmPR1L -overexpressing lines OEA1 and OEA2 to C. sojina infection was significantly increased from a neutral level in wild-type plants to a moderate level. These findings predominantly reveal the positive role of GmPR1L in inducing resistance to C. sojina infection in soybean, which may facilitate the production of improved disease-resistant soybean cultivars in the future.
Keyphrases
  • single cell
  • genome wide
  • rna seq
  • copy number
  • gene expression
  • poor prognosis
  • genome wide identification
  • transcription factor
  • dna methylation
  • real time pcr
  • quantum dots
  • high glucose
  • amino acid
  • living cells