4.7 Article

Ac/Ds-Induced Receptor-like Kinase Genes Deletion Provides Broad-Spectrum Resistance to Bacterial Blight in Rice

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms23094561

Keywords

Ac; Ds; chromosomal deletion; receptor-like kinase; broad-spectrum resistance; rice

Funding

  1. Nature Science Foundation of Liaoning [2020-YQ-05]
  2. Nature Science Foundation of China [32072406]

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This study identified a mutant related to Xoo, in which the deletion of RLK19-22 genes resulted in broad-spectrum resistance. The mutant showed induced expression of pathogenesis-related genes and increased cellular H2O2 levels compared to wild-type plants. Further analysis revealed the interaction between RLK20 and RBOHB, and co-expression of RLK20 and RBOHB reduced ROS accumulation. The findings provide important theoretical basis and valuable information for breeding rice cultivars resistant to bacterial blight.
Rice bacterial blight caused by Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzae (Xoo) seriously affects rice yield production. The discovery and application of broad-spectrum resistance genes are of great advance for disease resistance breeding. Previously, we identified that multiple receptor-like kinase (RLK) family gene deletions induced by the Ac/Ds system resulted in a lesion mimic symptom. In this study, the mutant #29 showed that this lesion mimic symptom was isolated. Further analysis identified that four RLK genes (RLK19-22) were deleted in the #29 mutant. The #29 mutant exhibited broad-spectrum resistance to Xoo and subsequent analyses identified that pathogenesis-related genes PR1a, PBZ1, and cellular H2O2 levels were significantly induced in the mutant compared to wild-type plants. A genetic analysis revealed that reconstruction of RLK20, RLK21, or RLK22 rescued the lesion mimic symptom of the #29 mutant, indicating that these three RLKs are responsible for broad-spectrum resistance in rice. Further yeast two hybrid and bimolecular fluorescence complementation assays demonstrated that RLK20 interacts with RBOHB, which is a ROS producer in plants. Compared to wild-type plants, the #29 mutant was more, while #29/RLK20 ox was less, susceptible to MV (methyl-viologen), an ROS inducer. Co-expression of RLK20 and RBOHB reduced RBOHB-promoted H2O2 accumulation in the cells. Taken together, our research indicated that the RLKs may inhibit RBOHB activity to negatively regulate rice resistance to Xoo. These results provide the theoretical basis and valuable information about the target genes necessary for the successful breeding of rice cultivars resistant to bacterial blight.

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