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The Tomato spotted wilt virus cell‐to‐cell movement protein (NS(M)) triggers a hypersensitive response in Sw‐5‐containing resistant tomato lines and in Nicotiana benthamiana transformed with the functional Sw‐5b resistance gene copy

Authors :
Hallwass, Mariana
de Oliveira, Athos Silva
de Campos Dianese, Erico
Lohuis, Dick
Boiteux, Leonardo Silva
Inoue‐Nagata, Alice Kazuko
Resende, Renato O.
Kormelink, Richard
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
John Wiley and Sons Inc., 2014.

Abstract

Although the Sw‐5 gene cluster has been cloned, and Sw‐5b has been identified as the functional gene copy that confers resistance to Tomato spotted wilt virus (TSWV), its avirulence (Avr) determinant has not been identified to date. Nicotiana tabacum ‘SR1‘ plants transformed with a copy of the Sw‐5b gene are immune without producing a clear visual response on challenge with TSWV, whereas it is shown here that N. benthamiana transformed with Sw‐5b gives a rapid and conspicuous hypersensitive response (HR). Using these plants, from all structural and non‐structural TSWV proteins tested, the TSWV cell‐to‐cell movement protein (NS(M)) was confirmed as the Avr determinant using a Potato virus X (PVX) replicon or a non‐replicative pEAQ‐HT expression vector system. HR was induced in Sw‐5b‐transgenic N. benthamiana as well as in resistant near‐isogenic tomato lines after agroinfiltration with a functional cell‐to‐cell movement protein (NS(M)) from a resistance‐inducing (RI) TSWV strain (BR‐01), but not with NS(M) from a Sw‐5 resistance‐breaking (RB) strain (GRAU). This is the first biological demonstration that Sw‐5‐mediated resistance is triggered by the TSWV NS(M) cell‐to‐cell movement protein.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........456b8603b630f509f163640f1f8c60eb