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Cloning of the A rabidopsis rwm1 gene for resistance to W atermelon mosaic virus points to a new function for natural virus resistance genes
Author(s) -
Ouibrahim Laurence,
Mazier Marianne,
Estevan Joan,
Pagny Gaëlle,
Decroocq Véronique,
Desbiez Cécile,
Moretti André,
Gallois JeanLuc,
Caranta Carole
Publication year - 2014
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/tpj.12586
Subject(s) - biology , nicotiana benthamiana , arabidopsis , genetics , gene , potyvirus , positional cloning , arabidopsis thaliana , complementation , virus , plant virus , mutant
Summary Arabidopsis thaliana represents a valuable and efficient model to understand mechanisms underlying plant susceptibility to viral diseases. Here, we describe the identification and molecular cloning of a new gene responsible for recessive resistance to several isolates of Watermelon mosaic virus (WMV, genus Potyvirus ) in the Arabidopsis Cvi‐0 accession. rwm1 acts at an early stage of infection by impairing viral accumulation in initially infected leaf tissues. Map‐based cloning delimited rwm1 on chromosome 1 in a 114‐kb region containing 30 annotated genes. Positional and functional candidate gene analysis suggested that rwm1 encodes cPGK 2 (At1g56190), an evolutionary conserved nucleus‐encoded chloroplast phosphoglycerate kinase with a key role in cell metabolism. Comparative sequence analysis indicates that a single amino acid substitution (S78G) in the N‐terminal domain of cPGK 2 is involved in rwm1 ‐mediated resistance. This mutation may have functional consequences because it targets a highly conserved residue, affects a putative phosphorylation site and occurs within a predicted nuclear localization signal. Transgenic complementation in Arabidopsis together with virus‐induced gene silencing in Nicotiana benthamiana confirmed that cPGK 2 corresponds to rwm1 and that the protein is required for efficient WMV infection. This work uncovers new insight into natural plant resistance mechanisms that may provide interesting opportunities for the genetic control of plant virus diseases.