4.8 Article

Sorbitol Modulates Resistance to Alternaria alternata by Regulating the Expression of an NLR Resistance Gene in Apple

Journal

PLANT CELL
Volume 30, Issue 7, Pages 1562-1581

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1105/tpc.18.00231

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Funding

  1. Cornell University Agricultural Experiment Station

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In plant-microbe interactions, plant sugars produced by photosynthesis are not only a carbon source for pathogens, but may also act as signals that modulate plant defense responses. Here, we report that decreasing sorbitol synthesis in apple (Malus domestica) leaves by antisense suppression of ALDOSE-6-PHOSPHATE REDUCTASE (A6PR) leads to downregulation of 56 NUCLEOTIDE BINDING/LEUCINE-RICH REPEAT (NLR) genes and converts the phenotypic response to Alternaria alternata from resistant to susceptible. We identified a resistance protein encoded by the apple MdNLR16 gene and a small protein encoded by the fungal HRIP1 gene that interact in both a yeast two-hybrid assay and a bimolecular fluorescence complementation assay. Deletion of HRIP1 in A. alternata enables gain of virulence on the wild-type control plant. Overexpression of MdNLR16 in two antisense A6PR lines increases resistance, whereas RNAi suppression of MdNLR16 in the wild-type control decreases resistance against A. alternata. MdWRKY79 transcriptionally regulates MdNLR16 by binding to the promoter of MdNLR16 in response to sorbitol, and exogenous sorbitol feeding partially restores resistance of the antisense A6PR lines to A. alternata. These findings indicate that sorbitol modulates resistance to A. alternata via the MdNLR16 protein that interacts with the fungal effector in a classic gene-for-gene manner in apple.

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