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Powdery mildew resistance in the Japanese domestic tobacco cultivar Kokubu is associated with aberrant splicing of MLO orthologues
Author(s) -
Fujimura T.,
Sato S.,
Tajima T.,
Arai M.
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
plant pathology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.928
H-Index - 85
eISSN - 1365-3059
pISSN - 0032-0862
DOI - 10.1111/ppa.12498
Subject(s) - powdery mildew , biology , mildew , genetics , intron , locus (genetics) , gene , cultivar , plant disease resistance , allele , botany
The Japanese domestic tobacco cultivar Kokubu (syn. Kou‐fan) is highly resistant to powdery mildew, and this trait is controlled by recessive alleles at two loci. To show the molecular mechanism of powdery mildew resistance of Kokubu, the transcripts and genomic sequences of tobacco Mildew resistance locus O ( MLO ) orthologues were compared between powdery mildew‐resistant and ‐susceptible cultivars. Two MLO orthologues ( Nt MLO 1 and Nt MLO 2 ) corresponding to powdery mildew susceptibility were expressed in tobacco leaves. However, the transcripts of both Nt MLO genes in the powdery mildew‐resistant cultivars harboured partial deletions or insertions. In a genomic DNA sequence alignment analysis, mutations in intron regions were detected in both Nt MLO genes of powdery mildew‐resistant cultivars, and these mutations were linked to the powdery mildew‐resistant phenotype. Transgenic Kokubu expressing wildtype Nt MLO 1 or Nt MLO 2 exhibited severe disease symptoms, the same as those in susceptible cultivars. These results indicate that mutations of intron regions of two Nt MLO genes in powdery mildew resistant cultivar Kokubu trigger the aberrant splicing of MLO transcripts and the subsequent inhibition of functional MLO protein synthesis, and that Nt MLO 1 and Nt MLO 2 are functionally redundant.

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