scholarly journals The Arabidopsis WRR4A and WRR4B paralogous NLR proteins both confer recognition of multiple Albugo candida effectors

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amey Redkar ◽  
Volkan Cevik ◽  
Kate Bailey ◽  
Oliver J. Furzer ◽  
Sebastian Fairhead ◽  
...  

The oomycete Albugo candida causes white blister rust, an important disease of Brassica crops. Distinct races of A. candida are defined by their specificity for infecting different host species. The White Rust Resistance 4 (WRR4) locus in Col-0 accession of Arabidopsis thaliana contains three genes that encode TIR-NLR resistance proteins. The Col-0 alleles of WRR4A and WRR4B confer resistance to at least four A. candida races (2, 7 and 9 from B. juncea, B. rapa and B. oleracea, respectively, and Race 4 from Capsella bursa-pastoris). Resistance mediated by both paralogs can be overcome by Col-0-virulent isolates of Race 4. After comparing repertoires of candidate effectors in resisted and resistance-breaking strains, we used transient co-expression in tobacco or Arabidopsis to identify effectors recognized by WRR4A and WRR4B. A library of CCG effectors from four A. candida races was screened for WRR4A- or WRR4B- dependent elicitation of hypersensitive response (HR). These CCG genes were validated for WRR-dependent HR by bombardment assays in wild type Col-0, wrr4A or wrr4B mutants. Our analysis revealed eight WRR4A-recognized CCGs and four WRR4B-recognized CCGs. Remarkably, the N-terminal region of 100 amino acids after the secretion signal is sufficient for WRR4A recognition of these eight recognized effectors. This multiple recognition capacity potentially explains the broad-spectrum resistance to many A. candida races conferred by WRR4 paralogs.

2018 ◽  
Vol 100 (3) ◽  
pp. 587-587
Author(s):  
Mohammad Reza Mirzaee ◽  
Sebastian Ploch ◽  
Lisa Nigrelli ◽  
Sepide Sajedi ◽  
Marco Thines

Author(s):  
K. G. Mukerji

Abstract A description is provided for Albugo candida. Information is included on the disease caused by the organism, its transmission, geographical distribution, and hosts. HOSTS: On members of Cruciferae and Capparidaceae and also on leaves of Reseda alba (Jorstad, 1964). DISEASE: White blister or white rust of crucifers. Infection occurs mostly in young plants. White chalky pustules present all over the plant except the roots. Often causes damage to cabbage and its varieties and other crucifers (25, 416; 32, 100; 39, 334; 51, 813). The attacked parts often show marked hypertrophy, especially of the inflorescence. In rare instances galls have been found on roots of radish, contining oospores and globular haustoria (30, 194; 32, 81, 192; 33, 459). GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION: World wide where hosts are present. TRANSMISSION: Primary infection is by zoospores from germinating zoospores left in the soil or plant debris from a previous crop (Butler & Jones, 1949; 34, 69, 336; 38, 582; 39, 753). Wind-borne sporangia also germinate by formation of zoospores.


2008 ◽  
Vol 21 (6) ◽  
pp. 757-768 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Hossein Borhan ◽  
Nick Gunn ◽  
Abigail Cooper ◽  
Sigrun Gulden ◽  
Mahmut Tör ◽  
...  

White blister rust in the Brassicaceae is emerging as a superb model for exploring how plant biodiversity has channeled speciation of biotrophic parasites. The causal agents of white rust across a wide breadth of cruciferous hosts currently are named as variants of a single oomycete species, Albugo candida. The most notable examples include a major group of physiological races that each are economically destructive in a different vegetable or oilseed crop of Brassica juncea (A. candida race 2), B. rapa (race 7), or B. oleracea (race 9); or parasitic on wild crucifers such as Capsella bursa-pastoris (race 4). Arabidopsis thaliana is innately immune to these races of A. candida under natural conditions; however, it commonly hosts its own molecularly distinct subspecies of A. candida (A. candida subsp. arabidopsis). In the laboratory, we have identified several accessions of Arabidopsis thaliana (e.g.,. Ws-3) that can permit varying degrees of rust development following inoculation with A. candida races 2, 4, and 7, whereas race 9 is universally incompatible in Arabidopsis thaliana and nonrusting resistance is the most prevalent outcome of interactions with the other races. Subtle variation in resistance phenotypes is evident, observed initially with an isolate of A. candida race 4, indicating additional genetic variation. Therefore, we used the race 4 isolate for map-based cloning of the first of many expected white rust resistance (WRR) genes. This gene was designated WRR4 and encodes a cytoplasmic toll-interleukin receptor-like nucleotide-binding leucine-rich repeat receptor-like protein that confers a dominant, broad-spectrum white rust resistance in the Arabidopsis thaliana accession Columbia to representative isolates of A. candida races 2, 4, 7, and 9, as verified by transgenic expression of the Columbia allele in Ws-3. The WRR4 protein requires functional expression of the lipase-like protein EDS1 but not the paralogous protein PAD4, and confers full immunity that masks an underlying nonhypersensitive incompatibility in Columbia to A. candida race 4. This residual incompatibility is independent of functional EDS1.


2011 ◽  
Vol 27 (2) ◽  
pp. 192-192 ◽  
Author(s):  
Young-Joon Choi ◽  
Mi-Jeong Park ◽  
Ji-Hyun Park ◽  
Hyeon-Dong Shin

Plant Disease ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 95 (7) ◽  
pp. 876-876 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. T. Koike ◽  
M. J. Sullivan ◽  
C. Southwick ◽  
C. Feng ◽  
J. C. Correll

In California, perennial pepperweed (Lepidium latifolium) is an introduced Brassicaceae plant that is invasive, highly competitive, and listed as a noxious weed that grows in areas such as marshes, meadows, roadsides, and irrigation ditches. From 2008 through 2010, perennial pepperweed growing near farms in Monterey and Santa Clara counties was infected with white rust. Symptoms were light green-to-chlorotic spots on adaxial leaf surfaces and corresponding white, blister-like sori growing underneath the raised leaf epidermis on the abaxial surface. Sporangia were collected from lesions and used for DNA extraction. The internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region was amplified with primers ITS1/ITS4 and sequenced. The sequence matched with Albugo candida by BLAST against GenBank. On the basis of morphological and molecular data, the pathogen was confirmed to be A. candida. Pathogenicity was tested by scraping sporangia from infected leaves and spraying a suspension (1 × 105 sporangia/ml) onto pepperweed seedlings grown in pots. Plants were placed in an incubator at 100% relative humidity and 12°C for 48 h to induce zoospore release. Plants were subsequently maintained in a greenhouse. After 15 to 17 days, inoculated plants developed white rust symptoms and signs. Control plants sprayed with water did not become diseased. The experiment was completed two times with the same results. To determine the race of A. candida from perennial pepperweed, 4- to 5-week-old plants and 1- to 2-week-old seedlings of differential hosts (1–4) were inoculated in a similar fashion. The differential hosts were the following: Raphanus sativus (race 1), Brassica juncea cv. Burgonde (race 2A), B. juncea cv. Cutlass (race 2V), Armoracia rusticana (race 3), Capsella bursa-pastoris (race 4), Sisymbrium officinale (race 5), Rorippa islandica (race 6), B. rapa (B. campestris) cv. Torch (race 7A), B. rapa cvs. Reward, Cutlass, and AC Parkland (race 7V), B. nigra (race 8), B. oleracea (race 9), Sinapis alba (race 10), B. carinata (race 11), and perennial pepperweed as a control. White rust developed on pepperweed 10 to 14 days later but was not found on any of the differential hosts, indicating that this pathogen is not one of the currently described 11 races. The following commercial crop species were inoculated using the same method: arugula (Eruca sativa), Japanese mustard (B. campestris subsp. nipposinica), red mustard (B. juncea subsp. rugosa), tah tsai (B. campestris subsp. narinosa), cauliflower (B. oleracea subsp. botrytis), Chinese cabbage (B. campestris subsp. pekinensis), bok choy (B. rapa Chinensis group), broccoli raab (B. rapa subsp. rapa), and perennial pepperweed as a control. Only the perennial pepperweed developed white rust. To our knowledge, this is the first characterization of A. candida infecting perennial pepperweed in California. The disease has been documented on this plant in Colorado and also in Bulgaria, Portugal, and Spain. The host range information is important to growers because it indicates that the race currently infecting perennial pepperweed will not infect commercial crucifers. References: (1) P. A. Delwich and P. H. Williams. Cruciferae Newsl. 2:39, 1977. (2) C. B. Hill et al. Cruciferae Newsl. 13:112, 1988. (3) S. R. Rimmer et al. Can. J. Plant Pathol. 22:229, 2000. (4) P. R. Verma et al. Can. J. Bot. 53:1016, 1975.


2010 ◽  
pp. 133-142 ◽  
Author(s):  
J.E. Petkowski ◽  
E. Minchinton ◽  
F. Thomson ◽  
R. Faggian ◽  
D. Cahill

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Baptiste Castel ◽  
Sebastian Fairhead ◽  
Oliver J Furzer ◽  
Amey Redkar ◽  
Shanshan Wang ◽  
...  

The oomycete Albugo candida causes white rust of Brassicaceae, including vegetable and oilseed crops, and wild relatives such as Arabidopsis thaliana. Novel White Rust Resistance (WRR)-genes from Arabidopsis enable new insights into plant/parasite co-evolution. WRR4A from Arabidopsis accession Col-0 provides resistance to many but not all white rust races, and encodes a nucleotide-binding (NB), leucine-rich repeat (LRR) (NLR) immune receptor protein. Col-0 WRR4A resistance is broken by a Col-0-virulent isolate of A. candida race 4 (AcEx1). We identified an allele of WRR4A in Arabidopsis accession Oy-0 and other accessions that confers full resistance to AcEx1. WRR4AOy-0 carries a C-terminal extension required for recognition of AcEx1, but reduces recognition of several effectors recognized by the WRR4A_Col-0 allele. WRR4A_Oy-0 confers full resistance to AcEx1 when expressed as a transgene in the oilseed crop Camelina sativa.


Plant Disease ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 98 (7) ◽  
pp. 1006-1006 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. J. Choi ◽  
K. S. Han ◽  
Y. H. Park ◽  
H. D. Shin

Wasabi (Wasabia japonica (Miq.) Matsum.), a member of the Brassicaceae family, is a commercially important crop in East Asian countries such as China, Japan, Korea, and Taiwan. In Korea, wasabi is under commercial development since it has become popular as a condiment due to its strong pungent constituents. In May 2013, wasabi plants showing typical symptoms of white blister rust disease were first observed in plastic greenhouses in Taebaek City, Korea. Leaves of infected plants had whitish sori on the lower surfaces and chlorotic blotches on the corresponding upper leaf surfaces. Later, sori changed to creamy to light tan with necrosis of leaf lesion. New infections might occur anytime during the growing season. A representative sample was deposited in the Korea University Herbarium (KUS-F27596). Microscopic examination of fresh materials was performed under a light microscope. The grouped sporangiophores were hyaline, clavate or cylindric, and measured 20 to 35 × 10 to 14 μm. The sporangia were arranged in basipetal chains, hyaline, globose to subglobose, with uniform wall thickness and measured 16 to 21 × 13 to 18 μm. The primary sporangia were morphologically similar to the secondary sporangia, although the former exhibited a slightly thicker wall than the latter. No resting organs were observed. Previously, the white blister rust pathogen on wasabi has been considered either Albugo candida or A. wasabiae, although the latter name is often considered a synonym of A. candida. Based on the morphological characteristics and the specific host plant, the causal agent of this disease was identified as A. candida (2). To confirm this morphological identification, genomic DNA was extracted from infected plant tissue, and the amplification and sequencing of the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region of rDNA of the Korean specimen were performed using procedures outlined by Choi et al. (1), with oomycete-specific primer set, DC6 and LR0. The resulting 835-bp sequence of the region was deposited in GenBank (Accession No. KF887494). Since this was the first ITS sequence submitted for A. candida on wasabi, comparable data were not available. A comparison with the ITS sequences available in the GenBank database revealed that it is identical to A. candida found on Capsella bursa-pastoris (AF271231), and shows a high similarity of 99% with many A. candida sequences originating from other brassicaceous plants. Therefore, the pathogen found in Korea was confirmed to be A. candida. In Korea, it has been reported that A. candida attacks Brassica juncea, B. campestris subsp. penikensis, and B. napus (3), but to our knowledge this is the first record of A. candida on wasabi (4). The white blister rust caused by A. candida is one of the most devastating diseases of wasabi in Japan and Taiwan where the crop is widely cultivated. On the other hand, in the United States, Canada, and New Zealand, where wasabi is a new crop on a commercial scale, there is no record of this disease. These facts taken together suggest that wasabi white blister rust be not only currently spreading in East Asia, but it also poses a new and serious threat to production of this crop in countries in which it is currently absent. References: (1) Y. J. Choi et al. Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 40:400, 2006. (2) Y. J. Choi et al. Fungal Divers. 27:11, 2007. (3) Y. J. Choi et al. Plant Pathol. J. 27: 192, 2011. (4) D. F. Farr and A. Y. Rossman. Fungal Databases. Syst. Mycol. Microbiol. Lab., Online publication, ARS, USDA, Retrieved November 15, 2013.


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