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Evidence that the recessive bymovirus resistance locus rym4 in barley corresponds to the eukaryotic translation initiation factor 4E gene
Authors:KONSTANTIN KANYUKA   ARNIS DRUKA  DAVID G. CALDWELL  ANNA TYMON  NICOLA MCCALLUM  ROBBIE WAUGH   MICHAEL J. ADAMS
Affiliation:Wheat Pathogenesis Programme, Plant–Pathogen Interactions Division, Rothamsted Research, Harpenden, Hertfordshire AL5 2JQ, UK;Genome Dynamics Programme, The Scottish Crop Research Institute, Invergowrie, Dundee DD2 5DA, Scotland, UK
Abstract:Recent studies have shown that resistance in several dicotyledonous plants to viruses in the genus Potyvirus is controlled by recessive alleles of the plant translation initiation factor eIF4E or eIF ( iso ) 4E genes. Here we provide evidence that the barley rym 4 gene locus, controlling immunity to viruses in the genus Bymovirus , corresponds to eIF4E . A molecular marker based on the sequence of eIF4E was developed and used to demonstrate that eIF4E and rym 4 map to the same genetic interval on chromosome 3HL in barley . Another genetic marker was developed that detects a polymorphism in the coding sequence of eIF4E and consistently distinguishes between rym 4 and susceptible barley cultivars of diverse parentage. The eIF4E gene product from barley genotypes carrying rym 4 and allelic rym 5 and rym 6 genes, originating from separate exotic germplasm, and a novel resistant allele that we identified through a reverse genetics approach all contained unique amino acid substitutions compared with the wild-type protein. Three-dimensional models of the barley eIF4E protein revealed that the polymorphic residues identified are all located at or near the mRNA cap-binding pocket, similarly to recent findings from studies on recessive potyvirus resistance in dicotyledonous plants. These new data complement our earlier observations that specific mutations in bymovirus VPg are responsible for overcoming rym 4/5-controlled resistance. Because the potyviral VPg is known to interact with eIF4E in dicotyledonous plants, it appears that monocotyledonous and dicotyledonous plants have evolved a similar strategy to combat VPg-encoding viruses in the family Potyviridae .
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