4.5 Article

Transgenic expression of pear PGIP in tomato limits fungal colonization

Journal

MOLECULAR PLANT-MICROBE INTERACTIONS
Volume 13, Issue 9, Pages 942-950

Publisher

AMER PHYTOPATHOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1094/MPMI.2000.13.9.942

Keywords

Lycopersicon esculentum; plant defenses; reducing sugar assay

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Transgenic tomato plants expressing the pear fruit polygalacturonase inhibitor protein (pPGIP) were used to demonstrate that this inhibitor of fungal pathogen endo-polygalacturonases (endo-PGs) influences disease development. Transgenic expression of pPGIP resulted in abundant accumulation of the heterologous protein in all tissues and did not alter the expression of an endogenous tomato fruit PGIP (tPGIP). The pPGIP protein was detected, as expected, in the cell wall protein fraction in all transgenic tissues. Despite differential glycosylation in vegetative and Fruit tissues, the expressed pPGIP was active in both tissues as an inhibitor of endo-PGs from Botrytis cinerea. The growth of B. cinerea on ripe tomato fruit expressing pPGIP was reduced, and tissue breakdown was diminished by as much as 15%, compared with nontransgenic fruit. In transgenic leaves, the expression of pPGIP reduced lesions of macerated tissue approximately 25%, a reduction of symptoms of fungal growth similar to that observed with a B. cinerea strain in which a single endo-PG gene, Bcpg1, had been deleted (A. ten Have, W, Mulder, J. Visser, and J A L van Kan, Mel. Plant-Microbe Interact. 11:1009-1016, 1998), Heterologous expression of pPGIP has demonstrated that PGTP inhibition of fungal PGs slows the expansion of disease lesions and the associated tissue maceration.

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