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1.
The tomato gene Mi-1 confers resistance to three species of root-knot nematodes, Meloidogyne spp. However, the resistance mediated by Mi-1 is inactive at soil temperatures above 28 degrees C. Previously, we identified and mapped a novel heat-stable nematode resistance gene from the wild species Lycopersicon peruvianum accession LA2157 on to chromosome 6. Here we report further characterization of this heat-stable resistance against three Mi-1-avirulent biotypes of Meloidogyne javanica, Meloidogyne arenaria and Meloidogyne incognita. Screening segregating F(2) and F(3) progenies, derived from an intraspecific cross between susceptible LA392 and resistant LA2157, for nematode resistance at 25 degrees C and 32 degrees C, revealed a simple dominant monogenic inheritance with all the biotypes tested. We designate this gene as Mi-9. As a first step towards cloning of Mi-9, we constructed a linkage map around this gene. A total of 216 F(2) progeny from the cross between LA392 and LA2157 were screened with M. javanica at 32 degrees C and with CT119 and Aps-1, markers that flank the genetic interval that contains the Mi-1 gene. DNA marker analysis indicated that these markers also flank Mi-9. Further mapping of recombinants with both RFLP and PCR-based markers localized Mi-9 to the short arm of chromosome 6 and within the same genetic interval that spans the Mi-1 region.  相似文献   

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 The root-knot nematode heat-stable resistance locus from L. peruvianum LA2157 was mapped on chromosome 6. All wild tomato LA2157 entries and the LA2157 S1 progeny tested were resistant to Mi-avirulent Meloidogyne spp. isolates at 32°C, indicating that the self-compatible accession is homozygous for heat-stable nematode resistance. The novel resistance locus was mapped on a RFLP linkage map; this map was based on a segregating F2 population obtained from the interspecific F1 between L. esculentum cv ‘Solentos’ and L. peruvianum LA2157. The inheritance of the heat-stable resistance was evaluated in 100 F3 lines derived from one F1 interspecific hybrid. The genotype of the resistance locus of the individual F2 plants was based on the phenotypic classification of their F3 lines, and the data were used to map the resistance locus on the arm of chromosome 6 with the closest linkage to TG178. The position of the novel heat-stable resistance of LA2157 was localized in the resistance genes’ cluster close to the location of gene Mi-1. Cuttings of the F3 lines expressed resistance to Mi-1-avirulent M. incognita and M. javanica biotypes at 25°C and at 32°C (a temperature at which Mi-1 resistance is not expressed). There was no difference in the segregating population for expression of heat-unstable resistance and heat-stable resistance to Mi-1-avirulent Meloidogyne spp. However, LA2157 and cuttings of the above F3 lines were susceptible to a Mi-1-virulent M. incognita isolate at 30°C and to a M. hapla isolate at 25°C. Received: 6 July 1998 / Accepted: 28 July 1998  相似文献   

4.
The Mi-1.2 gene in tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) is a member of the nucleotide-binding leucine-rich repeat (NBLRR) class of plant resistance genes, and confers resistance against root-knot nematodes (Meloidogyne spp.), the potato aphid (Macrosiphum euphorbiae), and the sweet potato whitefly (Bemisia tabaci). Mi-1.2 mediates a rapid local defensive response at the site of infection, although the signaling and defensive pathways required for resistance are largely unknown. In this study, eggplant (S. melongena) was transformed with Mi-1.2 to determine whether this gene can function in a genetic background other than tomato. Eggplants that carried Mi-1.2 displayed resistance to the root-knot nematode Meloidogyne javanica but were fully susceptible to the potato aphid, whereas a susceptible tomato line transformed with the same transgene was resistant to nematodes and aphids. This study shows that Mi-1.2 can confer nematode resistance in another Solanaceous species. It also indicates that the requirements for Mi-mediated aphid and nematode resistance differ. Potentially, aphid resistance requires additional genes that are not conserved between tomato and eggplant.  相似文献   

5.
The Mi-1 gene of tomato confers resistance against three species of root-knot nematode in tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum). Transformation of tomato carrying Mi-1 with a construct expressing NahG, which encodes salicylate hydroxylase, a bacterial enzyme that degrades salicylic acid (SA) to catechol, results in partial loss of resistance to root-knot nematodes. Exogenous SA was toxic to roots expressing NahG but not to control roots. This toxicity is most likely due to the production of catechol from SA, and we report here that 100 microM catechol is toxic to tomato roots. Benzothiadiazole, a SA analog, completely restores nematode resistance in Mi-1 roots transformed with NahG but does not confer resistance to susceptible tomato roots. The localized cell death produced by transient expression in Nicotiana benthamiana of Mi-DS4, a constitutively lethal chimera of Mi-1 with one of its homologs, was prevented by coexpression of NahG. These results indicate that SA is an important component of the signaling that leads to nematode resistance and the associated hypersensitive response.  相似文献   

6.
The tomato Mi-1 gene confers resistance against root-knot nematodes (Meloidogyne spp.) and a biotype of the potato aphid (Macrosiphum euphorbiae). Four mutagenized Mi-1/Mi-1 tomato populations were generated and screened for altered root-knot nematode resistance. Four independent mutants belonging to two phenotypic classes were isolated. One mutant was chosen for further analyzes; rme1 (for resistance to Meloidogyne) exhibited levels of infection comparable with those found on susceptible controls. Molecular and genetic data confirmed that rme1 has a single recessive mutation in a locus different from Mi-1. Cross-sections through galls formed by feeding nematodes on rme1 roots were identical to sections from galls of susceptible tomato roots. In addition to nematode susceptibility, infestation of rme1 plants with the potato aphid showed that this mutation also abolished aphid resistance. To determine whether Rme1 functions in a general disease-resistance pathway, the response against Fusarium oxysporum f.sp. lycopersici race 2, mediated by the I-2 resistance gene, was studied. Both rme1 and the wild type plants were equally resistant to the fungal pathogen. These results indicate that Rme1 does not play a general role in disease resistance but may be specific for Mi-1-mediated resistance.  相似文献   

7.
On the short arm of tomato chromosome 6, a cluster of disease resistance (R) genes have evolved harboring the Mi-1 and Cf genes. The Mi-1 gene confers resistance to root-knot nematodes, aphids, and whiteflies. Previously, we mapped two genes, Ol-4 and Ol-6, for resistance to tomato powdery mildew in this cluster. The aim of this study was to investigate whether Ol-4 and Ol-6 are homologues of the R genes located in this cluster. We show that near-isogenic lines (NIL) harboring Ol-4 (NIL-Ol-4) and Ol-6 (NIL-Ol-6) are also resistant to nematodes and aphids. Genetically, the resistance to nematodes cosegregates with Ol-4 and Ol-6, which are further fine-mapped to the Mi-1 cluster. We provide evidence that the composition of Mi-1 homologues in NIL-Ol-4 and NIL-Ol-6 is different from other nematode-resistant tomato lines, Motelle and VFNT, harboring the Mi-1 gene. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the resistance to both nematodes and tomato powdery mildew in these two NIL is governed by linked (if not the same) Mi-1 homologues in the Mi-1 gene cluster. Finally, we discuss how Solanum crops exploit Mi-1 homologues to defend themselves against distinct pathogens.  相似文献   

8.
Tomato (Solanum lycopersicum L.) is among the most valuable agricultural products, but Meloidogyne spp. (root-knot nematode) infestations result in serious crop losses. In tomato, resistance to root-knot nematodes is controlled by the gene Mi-1, but heat stress interferes with Mi-1-associated resistance. Inconsistent results in published field and greenhouse experiments led us to test the effect of short-term midday heat stress on tomato susceptibility to Meloidogyne incognita race 1. Under controlled day/night temperatures of 25°C/21°C, ‘Amelia’, which was verified as possessing the Mi-1 gene, was deemed resistant (4.1 ± 0.4 galls/plant) and Rutgers, which does not possess the Mi-1 gene, was susceptible (132 ± 9.9 galls/plant) to M. incognita infection. Exposure to a single 3 hr heat spike of 35°C was sufficient to increase the susceptibility of ‘Amelia’ but did not affect Rutgers. Despite this change in resistance, Mi-1 gene expression was not affected by heat treatment, or nematode infection. The heat-induced breakdown of Mi-1 resistance in ‘Amelia’ did recover with time regardless of additional heat exposures and M. incognita infection. These findings would aid in the development of management strategies to protect the tomato crop at times of heightened M. incognita susceptibility.  相似文献   

9.
The necessity to develop potato and tomato crops that possess durable resistance against the oomycete pathogen Phytophthora infestans is increasing as more virulent, crop-specialized and pesticide resistant strains of the pathogen are rapidly emerging. Here, we describe the positional cloning of the Solanum bulbocastanum-derived Rpi-blb2 gene, which even when present in a potato background confers broad-spectrum late blight resistance. The Rpi-blb2 locus was initially mapped in several tetraploid backcross populations, derived from highly resistant complex interspecific hybrids designated ABPT (an acronym of the four Solanum species involved:S. acaule, S. bulbocastanum, S. phureja and S. tuberosum), to the same region on chromosome 6 as the Mi-1 gene from tomato, which confers resistance to nematodes, aphids and white flies. Due to suppression of recombination in the tetraploid material, fine mapping was carried out in a diploid intraspecific S. bulbocastanum F1 population. Bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) libraries, generated from a diploid ABPT-derived clone and from the resistant S. bulbocastanum parent clone, were screened with markers linked to resistance in order to generate a physical map of the Rpi-blb2 locus. Molecular analyses of both ABPT- and S. bulbocastanum-derived BAC clones spanning the Rpi-blb2 locus showed it to harbor at least 15 Mi-1 gene homologs (MiGHs). Of these, five were genetically determined to be candidates for Rpi-blb2. Complementation analyses showed that one ABPT- and one S. bulbocastanum-derived MiGH were able to complement the susceptible phenotype in both S. tuberosum and tomato. Sequence analyses of both genes showed them to be identical. The Rpi-blb2 protein shares 82% sequence identity to the Mi-1 protein. Significant expansion of the Rpi-blb2 locus compared to the Mi-1 locus indicates that intrachromosomal recombination or unequal crossing over has played an important role in the evolution of the Rpi-blb2 locus. The contrasting evolutionary dynamics of the Rpi-blb2/Mi-1 loci in the two related genomes may reflect the opposite evolutionary potentials of the interacting pathogens.  相似文献   

10.
The tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) Mi-1 gene encodes a protein with putative coiled-coil nucleotide-binding site and leucine-rich repeat motifs. Mi-1 confers resistance to root-knot nematodes (Meloidogyne spp.), potato aphids (Macrosiphum euphorbiae), and sweet potato whitefly (Bemisia tabaci). To identify genes required in the Mi-1-mediated resistance to nematodes and aphids, we used tobacco rattle virus (TRV)-based virus-induced gene silencing (VIGS) to repress candidate genes and assay for nematode and aphid resistance. We targeted Sgt1 (suppressor of G-two allele of Skp1), Rar1 (required for Mla12 resistance), and Hsp90 (heat shock protein 90), which are known to participate early in resistance gene signaling pathways. Two Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) Sgt1 genes exist and one has been implicated in disease resistance. Thus far the sequence of only one Sgt1 ortholog is known in tomato. To design gene-specific VIGS constructs, we cloned a second tomato Sgt1 gene, Sgt1-2. The gene-specific VIGS construct TRV-SlSgt1-1 resulted in lethality, while silencing Sgt1-2 using TRV-SlSgt1-2 did not result in lethal phenotype. Aphid and root-knot nematode assays of Sgt1-2-silenced plants indicated no role for Sgt1-2 in Mi-1-mediated resistance. A Nicotiana benthamiana Sgt1 VIGS construct silencing both Sgt1-1 and Sgt1-2 yielded live plants and identified a role for Sgt1 in Mi-1-mediated aphid resistance. Silencing of Rar1 did not affect Mi-1-mediated nematode and aphid resistance and demonstrated that Rar1 is not required for Mi-1 resistance. Silencing Hsp90-1 resulted in attenuation of Mi-1-mediated aphid and nematode resistance and indicated a role for Hsp90-1. The requirement for Sgt1 and Hsp90-1 in Mi-1-mediated resistance provides further evidence for common components in early resistance gene defense signaling against diverse pathogens and pests.  相似文献   

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Root-knot nematodes (Meloidogyne spp.) can cause severe problems in tomato production in warm climates. To date, Mi-1 is the only gene that has been used widely to develop cultivars for controlling disease caused by nematodes around the world. However, Mi-1 does not provide resistance to the pest when the soil temperature is above 28 °C. Tomato breeding line ZN17 has been reported to possess resistance to Meloidogyne incognita at high temperatures (32 °C). To identify markers linked tightly to resistance, an F2 population was developed by crossing the resistance line ZN17 to susceptible line 09C84. Analysis of F2 individuals by inoculating M. incognita suggested that resistance in ZN17 is conditioned by a single dominant gene temporarily designated as Mi-HT. Linkage analysis suggested that Mi-HT is located on the short arm of chromosome 6. One marker, W737, co-segregated with Mi-HT. Comparisons of map positions of Mi-HT, Mi-1, and Mi-9, as well as marker genotypes in LA2157, Motelle, and ZN17 suggested that Mi-HT might be a homologue of Mi-1 and Mi-9 or a new gene. The results obtained in this study will facilitate fine-mapping and cloning of the gene as well as marker-assisted breeding for heat-stable resistance to southern root-knot nematodes in tomato.  相似文献   

13.
Meloidogyne enterolobii is widely considered to be an aggressive root-knot nematode species that is able to reproduce on root-knot nematode-resistant tomato and pepper cultivars. In greenhouse experiments, M. enterolobii isolates 1 and 2 from Switzerland were able to reproduce on tomato cultivars carrying the Mi-1 resistance gene as well as an N-carrying pepper cultivar. Reproduction factors (Rf) ranged between 12 and 109 depending on the plant cultivar, with M. enterolobii isolate 2 being more virulent when compared to isolate 1. In contrast, M. arenaria completely failed to reproduce on these resistant tomato and pepper cultivars. Although some variability in virulence and effectiveness of root-knot nematode-resistance genes was detected, none of the plant cultivars showed Rf values less than 1 or less than 10% of the reproduction observed on the susceptible cv. 'Moneymaker' (Rf = 23-44) used to characterize resistance. The ability of M. enterolobii to overcome the resistance of tomato and pepper carrying the Mi-1 and the N gene makes it difficult to manage this root-knot nematode species, particularly in organic farming systems where chemical control is not an option.  相似文献   

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15.
The Mi-1.2 resistance gene in tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) confers resistance against several species of root-knot nematodes (Meloidogyne spp.). This study examined the impact of M. javanica on the reproductive fitness of near-isogenic tomato cultivars with and without Mi-1.2 under field and greenhouse conditions. Surprisingly, neither nematode inoculation or host plant resistance impacted the yield of mature fruits in field microplots (inoculum=8,000 eggs/plant), or fruit or seed production in a follow-up greenhouse bioassay conducted with a higher inoculum level (20,000 eggs/plant). However, under heavy nematode pressure (200,000 eggs/plant), greenhouse-grown plants carrying Mi-1.2 had more than ten-fold greater fruit production than susceptible plants and nearly forty-fold greater estimated lifetime seed production, confirming prior reports of the benefits of Mi-1.2. In all cases Mi-mediated resistance significantly reduced nematode reproduction. These results indicated that tomato can utilize tolerance mechanisms to compensate for moderate levels of nematode infection, but that the Mi-1.2 resistance gene confers a dramatic fitness benefit under heavy nematode pressure. No significant cost of resistance was detected in the absence of nematode infection.  相似文献   

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17.
Kruijt M  Brandwagt BF  de Wit PJ 《Genetics》2004,168(3):1655-1663
Cf resistance genes in tomato confer resistance to the fungal leaf pathogen Cladosporium fulvum. Both the well-characterized resistance gene Cf-9 and the related 9DC gene confer resistance to strains of C. fulvum that secrete the Avr9 protein and originate from the wild tomato species Lycopersicon pimpinellifolium. We show that 9DC and Cf-9 are allelic, and we have isolated and sequenced the complete 9DC cluster of L. pimpinellifolium LA1301. This 9DC cluster harbors five full-length Cf homologs, including orthologs of the most distal homologs of the Cf-9 cluster and three central 9DC genes. Two 9DC genes (9DC1 and 9DC2) have an identical coding sequence, whereas 9DC3 differs at its 3' terminus. From a detailed comparison of the 9DC and Cf-9 clusters, we conclude that the Cf-9 and Hcr9-9D genes from the Cf-9 cluster are ancestral to the first 9DC gene and that the three 9DC genes were generated by subsequent intra- and intergenic unequal recombination events. Thus, the 9DC cluster has undergone substantial rearrangements in the central region, but not at the ends. Using transient transformation assays, we show that all three 9DC genes confer Avr9 responsiveness, but that 9DC2 is likely the main determinant of Avr9 recognition in LA1301.  相似文献   

18.
The response of a susceptible tomato cultivar (Solanum lycopersicum cv. Rio Grande) to infection by three populations of root-knot nematode (Meloidogyne incognita) was compared histologically with that of Lycopersicon esculentum cv. Monita, L. esculentum cv. VFN8 and Solanum lycopersicum cv. Nemador possessing the Mi-1 resistance gene and accession PI126443 of L. peruvianum possessing the Mi-3 gene. The resistant cultivars showed susceptibility to the Tunisian Meloidogyne populations. Feeding sites were characterised by the development of giant cells that contained granular cytoplasm and several hypertrophied nuclei. The cytoplasm of giant cells was aggregated along their thickened cell walls and consequently the vascular tissues within galls appeared disrupted and disorganised. Feeding site formed on resistant L. esculentum lines and susceptible cultivar Rio Grande are similar according to cell and nucleus number, and the nurse superficies. Resistant accession L. peruvianum PI126443, known to possess heat-stable nematode resistance, also showed susceptible reaction to Tunisian Meloidogyne incognita populations; however, nematode development was reduced in comparison with susceptible plants and less developed feeding cells were observed.  相似文献   

19.
Accessions of the wild tomato species L. peruvianum were screened with a root-knot nematode population (557R) which infects tomato plants carrying the nematode resistance gene Mi. Several accessions were found to carry resistance to 557R. A L. peruvianum backcross population segregating for resistance to 557R was produced. The segregation ratio of resistant to susceptible plants suggested that a single, dominant gene was a major factor in the new resistance. This gene, which we have designated Mi-3, confers resistance against nematode strains that can infect plants carrying Mi. Mi-3, or a closely linked gene, also confers resistance to nematodes at 32°C, a temperature at which Mi is not effective. Bulked-segregant analysis with resistant and susceptible DNA pools was employed to identify RAPD markers linked to this gene. Five-hundred-and-twenty oligonucleotide primers were screened and two markers linked to the new resistance gene were identified. One of the linked markers (NR14) was mapped to chromosome 12 of tomato in an L. esculentum/L. pennellii mapping population. Linkage of NR14 and Mi-3 with RFLP markers known to map on the short arm of chromosome 12 was confirmed by Southern analysis in the population segregating for Mi-3. We have positioned Mi-3 near RFLP marker TG180 which maps to the telomeric region of the short arm of chromosome 12 in tomato.  相似文献   

20.
The gene Mi-1 confers effective resistance in tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum) against root-knot nematodes and some isolates of potato aphid. This locus was introgressed from L. peruvianum into the corresponding region on chromosome 6 in tomato. In nematode-resistant tomato, Mi-1 and six homologs are grouped into two clusters separated by 300 kb. Analysis of BAC clones revealed that the Mi-1 locus from susceptible tomato carried the same number and distribution of Mi-1 homologs, as did the resistant locus. Molecular markers flanking the resistant and susceptible loci were in the same relative orientation, but markers between the two clusters were in an inverse orientation. The simplest explanation for these observations is that there is an inversion between the two clusters of homologs when comparing the Mi-1 loci from L. esculentum and L. peruvianum. Such an inversion may explain previous observations of severe recombination suppression in the region. Two Mi-1 homologs identified from the BAC library derived from susceptible tomato are not linked to the chromosome 6 locus, but map to chromosome 5 in regions known to contain resistance gene loci in other solanaceous species.Communicated by J.S. Heslop-Harrison  相似文献   

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