z-logo
Premium
Dominant‐negative interference with defence signalling by truncation mutations of the tomato Cf‐9 disease resistance gene
Author(s) -
Barker Claire L.,
Baillie Brett K.,
HammondKosack Kim E.,
Jones Jonathan D. G.,
Jones David A.
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
the plant journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.058
H-Index - 269
eISSN - 1365-313X
pISSN - 0960-7412
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-313x.2006.02699.x
Subject(s) - biology , mutant , rna interference , genetics , gene , phenotype , transgene , allele , gene silencing , rna
Summary The tomato Cf‐9 gene confers resistance to races of the leaf mould fungus Cladosporium fulvum that carry the Avr9 avirulence gene. Cf‐9 was isolated by transposon tagging using a modified maize Dissociation ( Ds ) element. This generated an allelic series of Ds ‐induced mutations of Cf‐9 , of which two were found to confer novel phenotypes in a screen for mutants affecting wild‐type Cf‐9 function in trans . Genetic and molecular analysis of these mutants suggested semidominant, Avr9 ‐dependent, negative‐interfering mutations involving Ds insertions in a defined subregion of Cf‐9 . Interference was associated with expression of the 5′‐end of Cf‐9 upstream of the Ds insertions in these mutants, suggesting that truncated Cf‐9 proteins were the likely cause of interference. Transgenic tomato lines harbouring Cf‐9 constructs with premature stop codons in positions similar to the Ds insertions also showed interference, indicating that the presence of Ds was not required for interference to occur. Interestingly, interference in these transgenic lines was completely dominant and was associated with a pronounced developmental phenotype that was dependent on co‐expression of Cf‐9 , Avr9 and a truncated Cf‐9 transgene. However, interference with a weakly autoactive Hcr9 gene was Avr9 ‐independent and did not cause a developmental phenotype, suggesting that localized restoration of Cf‐9/Avr9 ‐dependent cell death was responsible for the developmental phenotype. The restricted region in which truncation of Cf‐9 results in dominant‐negative interference suggests that leucine‐rich repeats (LRR) 16–19 of Cf‐9 may mediate dimerization of Cf‐9 and LRRs 20–23 may mediate interactions with downstream partner proteins required for Cf‐9 signalling, or vice versa.

This content is not available in your region!

Continue researching here.

Having issues? You can contact us here