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Aphid Resistance in Medicago truncatula Involves Antixenosis and Phloem-Specific, Inducible Antibiosis, and Maps to a Single Locus Flanked by NBS-LRR Resistance Gene Analogs.

Authors :
Klingler, John
Creasy, Robert
Lingling Gao
Nair, Ramakrishnan M.
Calix, Alonso Suazo
Jacob, Helen Spafford
Edwards, Owain R.
Singh, Karam B.
Source :
Plant Physiology; Apr2005, Vol. 137 Issue 4, p1445-1455, 11p, 1 Diagram, 2 Charts, 10 Graphs
Publication Year :
2005

Abstract

Aphids and related insects feed from a single cell type in plants: the phloem sieve element. Genetic resistance to Acyrthosiphon kondoi Shinji (bluegreen aphid or blue alfalfa aphid) has been identified in Medicago truncatula Gaert. (barrel medic) and backcrossed into susceptible cultivars. The status of M. truncatula as a model legume allows an in-depth study of defense against this aphid at physiological, biochemical, and molecular levels. In this study, two closely related resistant and susceptible genotypes were used to characterize the aphid-resistance phenotype. Resistance conditions antixenosis since migratory aphids were deterred from settling on resistant plants within 6 h of release, preferring to settle on susceptible plants. Analysis of feeding behavior revealed the trait affects A. kondoi at the level of the phloem sieve element. Aphid reproduction on excised shoots demonstrated that resistance requires an intact plant. Antibiosis against A. kondoi is enhanced by prior infestation, indicating induction of this phloem-specific defense. Resistance segregates as a single dominant gene, AKR (Acyrthosiphon kondoi resistance), in two mapping populations, which have been used to map the locus to a region flanked by resistance gene analogs predicted to encode the CC-NBS-LRR subfamily of resistance proteins. This work provides the basis for future molecular analysis of defense against phloem parasitism in a plant model system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00320889
Volume :
137
Issue :
4
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Plant Physiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
16911475
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.104.051243