4.5 Article

Characterization and Proteomic Analysis of Novel Rice Lesion Mimic Mutant with Enhanced Disease Resistance

Journal

RICE SCIENCE
Volume 28, Issue 5, Pages 466-478

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.rsci.2021.07.007

Keywords

lesion mimic mutant; H2O2; disease resistance; pathogenesis-related protein; resistance-related pathway

Funding

  1. Zhejiang Provincial Key Research and Development Plan [2019C02006]
  2. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2016YFD0200804, 2016YFD0100601-15]
  3. Key Program of Zhejiang Provincial Foundation for Natural Science [LZ16C130002]
  4. Zhejiang Fundamental Public Welfare Research Program [LGN19C140008]
  5. State Key Laboratory for Managing Biotic and Chemical Threats to Quality and Safety of Agro-products [2010DS700124-ZZ1907]

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Lesion mimic mutants (LMMs) are plants showing lesions without pathogen infection, resistance to pathogens and enhanced disease resistance. A rice LMM, hpil, produced large amounts of H2O2 leading to cell death, controlled by a single recessive gene. Proteomic analysis showed down-regulation of metabolic proteins and up-regulation of resistance-related proteins in hpil, laying the foundation for target gene cloning and understanding rice autoimmunity mechanisms.
Lesion mimic mutants (LMMs) are plants that spontaneously form lesions without pathogen infection or external stimulus and exhibit resistance to pathogens. Here, a rice LMM was created by ethyl methane sulfonate mutagenesis, named as hpil (hydrogen peroxide induced lesion). Diaminobenzidine and trypan blue staining showed that large amounts of H2O2 were produced and cell death was occurred at and around the parts of lesion mimic in the rice leaves. The phenotype of hpil is controlled by a single recessive gene, localized at a 2 Mb interval on chromosome 2. The data suggested that hpil is a novel LMM with enhanced bacterial and fungal disease resistance, and multiple pathogenesis-related proteins (PRs) were up-regulated. The proteomes of leaves at three positions (different degrees of lesion mimic severity) were characterized in hpil compared with its wild type plant. Differentially expressed proteins were detected by two dimensional difference gel electrophoresis and 274 proteins were identified by MALDI TOF/TOF (TM). These proteins were related to metabolic process, cellular process and response to stimulus, with mostly down-regulated in hpil leaves. Many of these proteins were related to the Calvin cycle, photosynthetic electron transport chain, glycolysis/gluconeogenesis and phosphonates pathways. Some resistance-related proteins including 14-3-3 proteins, OsPR10 and antioxidases such as peroxidase, superoxide dismutase and ascorbate peroxidase were up-regulated in leaves with lesion mimic. These results provide the foundation for cloning of the target gene and shed light on the mechanism involved in autoimmunity of rice.

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