4.2 Article

Identification and functional analysis of AG1-IA specific genes of Rhizoctonia solani

Journal

CURRENT GENETICS
Volume 60, Issue 4, Pages 327-341

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00294-014-0438-x

Keywords

Sheath blight disease; Fungal pathogenesis; Anastomosis group; Disease resistance; Host specificity; Necrotrophs; Secondary metabolism; Toxins

Funding

  1. SPM fellowship from Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (Govt. of India)
  2. Post-Doctoral Research fellowship from Department of Biotechnology (DBT, Govt of India)
  3. National Institute of Plant Genome Research, India

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Rhizoctonia solani is an important necrotrophic fungal pathogen which causes disease on diverse plant species. It has been classified into 14 genetically distinct anastomosis groups (AGs), however, very little is known about their genomic diversity. AG1-IA causes sheath blight disease in rice and controlling this disease remains a challenge for sustainable rice cultivation. Recently the draft genome sequences of AG1-IA (rice isolate) and AG1-IB (lettuce isolate) had become publicly available. In this study, using comparative genomics, we report identification of 3,942 R. solani genes that are uniquely present in AG1-IA. Many of these genes encode important biological, molecular functions and exhibit dynamic expression during in-planta growth of the pathogen in rice. Based upon sequence similarity with genes that are required for plant and human/zoonotic diseases, we identified several putative virulence/pathogenicity determinants amongst AG1-IA specific genes. While studying the expression of 19 randomly selected genes, we identified three genes highly up-regulated during in-planta growth. The detailed in silico characterization of these genes and extent of their up-regulation in different rice genotypes, having variable degree of disease susceptibility, suggests their importance in rice-Rhizoctonia interactions. In summary, the present study reports identification, functional characterization of AG1-IA specific genes and predicts important virulence determinants that might enable the pathogen to grow inside hostile plant environment. Further characterization of these genes would shed useful insights about the pathogenicity mechanism of AG1-IA on rice.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.2
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available