Guido Van den Ackerveken's research while affiliated with Utrecht University and other places

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Publications (22)


Lactuca super-pangenome reduces bias towards reference genes in lettuce research
  • Preprint
  • File available

June 2024

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37 Reads

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Sarah L. Mehrem

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Basten L. Snoek

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[...]

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Breeding of lettuce ( Lactuca sativa L.), the most important leafy vegetable worldwide, for enhanced disease resistance and resilience relies on multiple wild relatives to provide the necessary genetic diversity. In this study, we constructed a super-pangenome based on four Lactuca species (representing the primary, secondary and tertiary gene pools) and comprising 474 accessions. We include 68 newly sequenced accessions to improve cultivar coverage and add important foundational breeding lines. With the super-pangenome we find substantial presence/absence variation (PAV) and copy-number variation (CNV). Functional enrichment analyses of core and variable genes show that transcriptional regulators are conserved whereas disease resistance genes are variable. PAV-genome-wide association studies (GWAS) and CNV-GWAS are largely congruent with single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP)-GWAS. Importantly, they also identify several major novel quantitative trait loci (QTL) for resistance against Bremia lactucae in variable regions not present in the reference lettuce genome. The usability of the super-pangenome is demonstrated by identifying the likely origin of non-reference resistance loci from the wild relatives Lactuca serriola , Lactuca saligna and Lactuca virosa . The provided methodology and data provide a strong basis for research into PAVs, CNVs and other variation underlying important biological traits of lettuce and other crops.

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The Role of Salicylic Acid in the Expression of RECEPTOR-LIKE PROTEIN 23 and Other Immunity-Related Genes

April 2024

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20 Reads

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1 Citation

Phytopathology

The hormone salicylic acid (SA) plays a crucial role in plant immunity by activating responses that arrest pathogen ingress. SA accumulation also penalizes growth, a phenomenon visible in mutants that hyperaccumulate SA, resulting in strong growth inhibition. An important question, therefore, is why healthy plants produce basal levels of this hormone when defense responses are not activated. Here, we show that basal SA levels in unchallenged plants are needed for the expression of a number of immunity-related genes and receptors, such as RECEPTOR-LIKE PROTEIN 23 ( RLP23). This was shown by depleting basal SA levels in transgenic Arabidopsis lines through the overexpression of the SA-inactivating hydroxylases DOWNY MILDEW-RESISTANT 6 (DMR6) or DMR6-LIKE OXYGENASE 1. RNAseq analysis revealed that the expression of a subset of immune receptor and signaling genes is strongly reduced in the absence of SA. The biological relevance of this was shown for RLP23: In SA-depleted and SA-insensitive plants, responses to the RLP23 ligand, the microbial pattern nlp24, were strongly reduced, whereas responses to flg22 remained unchanged. We hypothesize that low basal SA levels are needed for the expression of a subset of immune system components that enable early pathogen detection and activation of immunity.


Effect of water- and wind-transmitted Hpa infections on bacterial phyllosphere community structure
(a) Quantification of Hpa DNA relative to Arabidopsis DNA by qPCR for samples taken 7 days post-inoculation. Bars represent average Hpa abundance. Error bars show standard error. N = 7 biologically independent samples. PCoA ordination plot based on Bray-Curtis dissimilarities of the (b) bacterial phyllosphere communities and (c) fungal phyllosphere communities of Arabidopsis thaliana Col-0 untreated control plants (blue symbols), or plants inoculated with Hpa spores via wind (orange stroke) or water (orange fill).
Source data
Compatibility of Noco2 and Cala2 with susceptible and resistant Arabidopsis accessions
qPCR quantification of Hpa abundance in the susceptible and resistant Hpa-Arabidopsis interactions indicated, confirming that C24 is resistant to both Noco2 and Cala2, that Col-0 is susceptible to Noco2, that Ler is susceptible to Cala2, and that Pro-0 is susceptible to both Noco2 and Cala2. qPCR quantification was performed on total genomic DNA from inoculated leaves that were also used for 16 S rDNA amplicon sequencing (Fig. 1). Hpa abundance was calculated as a ratio of the levels of ACTIN in Hpa and Arabidopsis. Bars represent average ratios, error bars represent standard error. N = 4 biologically independent samples, except for C24 mock-, Noco2-, and Cala2- treated (N = 3 biologically independent samples).
Source data
Schematic overview of the ‘9-passages experiment’, which tests the effect of the removal of Hpa on its associated microbiome
A uniform HAM (uHAM) containing a mix of of Noco2 and Cala2 spore suspensions was spray-inoculated on different Arabidopsis genotypes to selectively remove Noco2 and/or Cala2 from the microbiome (HAM) that travels together with these Hpa isolates upon passaging to new host plants. One week post-inoculation, Col-0 (Lineage 1) and Ler plants (Lineage 2) sporulated with Noco2 and Cala2, respectively, and Col-0/RPP5 transgenic plants (Lineage 3) did not sporulate. From each Arabidopsis genotype, a leaf wash-off was obtained, containing Noco2, Cala2, or no Hpa, and sprayed on eight pots containing small fields of Ler/rpp5 mutant plants, which are susceptible to both Noco2 and Cala2. All pots were then placed in individual plastic containers, to prevent cross-contamination between pots. One week post-inoculation, the Ler/rpp5 plants that were inoculated with Noco2 (Lineage 1) or Cala2 (Lineage 2), sporulated, while the Ler/rpp5 plants that were inoculated with the leaf wash-off without Hpa spores (Lineage 3) did not display disease symptoms. From each individual pot, the leaf wash-off was sprayed on a new pot containing Ler/rpp5 plants, thereby propagating eight separate phyllosphere microbiomes or Hpa cultures per lineage. This process was maintained for nine consecutive weeks, allowing eight separate lineages of Noco2, Cala2, or the uHAM without Hpa to develop independently. Eight untreated control pots with Ler/rpp5 plants were included for all planting cycles.
The Hpa-culture bacterial community is largely unaffected by removal of Hpa, but nonetheless there are community shifts in the absence of Hpa
PcoA plots based on Bray-Curtis dissimilarities of (a) all samples from Lineages 1–3 and untreated plants of passages 1 (circles), passage 5 (triangles) and passage 9 (diamonds); and of all inoculated samples of Lineage 1–3 from (b) passage 1, (c) passage 5, and (d) passage 9. Plants were left untreated (black symbols) or were inoculated with leaf wash-offs from Lineage 1 containing Noco2 (orange symbols), from Lineage 2 containing Cala2 (green symbols), or from Lineage 3 which remained Hpa free (blue symbols).
Setup of soil-borne legacy experiments
A conditioning population of two-week-old Arabidopsis thaliana Col- seedlings was inoculated with mock, Hpa Noco2 or gnoHpa Noco2. After one week of infection, shoots were cut-off and a response population of plants was directly sown on the conditioned soil and again mock- Hpa- or gnoHpa-inoculated. Figure created with BioRender.com.

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Obligate biotroph downy mildew consistently induces near-identical protective microbiomes in Arabidopsis thaliana

November 2023

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432 Reads

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8 Citations

Nature Microbiology

Hyaloperonospora arabidopsidis (Hpa) is an obligately biotrophic downy mildew that is routinely cultured on Arabidopsis thaliana hosts that harbour complex microbiomes. We hypothesized that the culturing procedure proliferates Hpa-associated microbiota (HAM) in addition to the pathogen and exploited this model system to investigate which microorganisms consistently associate with Hpa. Using amplicon sequencing, we found nine bacterial sequence variants that are shared between at least three out of four Hpa cultures in the Netherlands and Germany and comprise 34% of the phyllosphere community of the infected plants. Whole-genome sequencing showed that representative HAM bacterial isolates from these distinct Hpa cultures are isogenic and that an additional seven published Hpa metagenomes contain numerous sequences of the HAM. Although we showed that HAM benefit from Hpa infection, HAM negatively affect Hpa spore formation. Moreover, we show that pathogen-infected plants can selectively recruit HAM to both their roots and shoots and form a soil-borne infection-associated microbiome that helps resist the pathogen. Understanding the mechanisms by which infection-associated microbiomes are formed might enable breeding of crop varieties that select for protective microbiomes.


Figure 2. Reduction in the basal SA levels lowers the expression of selected immunity genes and 137 associated PTI responses. (A) Expression of PTI-related genes, including signaling components and 138 immune receptors in indicated genotypes. Asterisks denote the differential expression compared to the 139 age-matched Col (|log2FC| ≥ 1, FDR-adj. p ≤ 0.05). (B) Reduced ROS burst in response to nlp24 (upper 140 panel) but not to flg22 (lower) in the SA-depleted lines compared to Col-0. The rlp23 and fls2 mutants 141
Basal expression of immune receptor genes requires low levels of the phytohormone salicylic acid

July 2023

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92 Reads

The hormone salicylic acid (SA) plays a crucial role in plant immunity by activating responses that arrest pathogen ingress. Since SA accumulation also penalizes growth, the question remains why healthy plants synthesize this hormone. By overexpressing SA-inactivating hydroxylases in Arabidopsis thaliana , we reveal that basal SA levels in unchallenged plants are needed for expression of selected immune receptor and signaling genes, thereby enabling early pathogen detection and activation of immunity.


Figure 1. Distinct Hpa cultures are enriched for identical ASVs that dominate the phyllosphere bacterial communities. (A) Overview of the susceptibility of each accession to Noco2 and Cala2. S: Susceptible. R: Resistant. Hpa isolate color codes and Arabidopsis thaliana accession shapes also function as a guide to colors and shapes in (B); PCoA ordination plot based on Bray-Curtis dissimilarities of the bacterial phyllosphere communities of Arabidopsis thaliana accessions Col-0, C24, Ler, or Pro-0 following inoculation with sterile water (mock) or spore suspensions of Hpa isolate Noco2, Cala2 or a mix of both isolates. Venn diagrams of (C) significantly enriched and (D) significantly depleted ASVs in Hpa-inoculated plants compared to mock-inoculated plants. (E) Stacked chart with the relative abundance of the 17 ASVs that are enriched in all Hpainoculated groups (red); those that were enriched in either Noco2-inoculated (orange) or Cala2-inoculated (green) plants; the 53 ASVs that were depleted in all Hpa-inoculated groups (dark blue) or ASVs that were depleted in two or less Hpainoculated groups (lighter blue); and all other ASVs in the data (white) in each inoculation group. (F) Stacked chart highlighting the abundances and taxonomies of the ASVs that were significantly enriched in Noco2- and Cala2-inoculated plants. ASVs are colored by taxonomy as indicated in the legend.
Figure 3. Isogenic HAM bacterial genomes are present in metagenomes of geographically separated Hpa cultures. (A) Heatmap indicating the presence of specific HAM bacterial genomes in publicly-available Hpa metagenomes. The numbers indicate signal-to-noise ratios, in which signal represents the number of reads that was assigned to a specific genome, and background noise was calculated as the total number of reads that were assigned to all genomes within a specific genus, divided by the number of genomes within that genus. Genomes with a signal-to-noise ratio below 2 were considered undetected (-). (B) Dendrogram based on UPGMA hierarchal clustering of a (1 - ANI) distance matrix for all Xanthomonas a0e1a isolates that were sequenced (red indicates isolates from Utrecht, purple indicates isolates from Cologne), Xanthomonas sp. WCS2014-23 (indicated in orange), a Xanthomonas sp. genome assembly using Sanger reads from an Emoy2-derived BAC-library (indicated in yellow), the 25 most related Xanthomonas genomes in the refseq database, and Xanthomonas campestris pv. campestris as outgroup. Tree scale represents branch length corresponding to the proportion of non-identical nucleotides between genomes.
Figure 4. HAM ASV abundances diminish in absence of Hpa. (A) PCoA ordination plot based on Bray-Curtis dissimilarities of phyllosphere bacterial communities following 9 HAM passages over Arabidopsis thaliana Ler/rpp5 plants in presence of Hpa isolate Noco2 (orange symbols) or Cala2 (green symbols), or in absence of Hpa (blue symbols). Black symbols show phyllosphere microbiomes of plants that were left untreated. Ellipses represent multivariate t-distributions with a 95% confidence level. (B) PCoA ordination biplot similar to (A), without untreated samples. Arrows indicate the relative contribution of individual ASVs to the first two principal coordinate axes. Displayed are the top five contributors for each axes (8 ASVs as 2 ASVs were top contributors to both axes). X a0e1a: Xanthomonas ASV a0e1a; R 2569b, Rhizobium ASV 2569; P, Pseudomonas; M, Methylophilus; F, Flavobacterium; C, Chryseobacterium. (C) Stacked bar chart with the relative abundances of the ASVs that are significantly enriched (red), depleted (blue), or unaffected (white) in Noco2- (Lineage 1) and Cala2-infected (Lineage 2) samples compared to Hpa-free cultures (Lineage 3). Each bar represents the ninth passage of an independent lineage of passages or an untreated sample (Lineage 4) grown at the same time.
Figure 6. HAM ASVs are selectively promoted in response to Hpa infection and associated with SBL. (A) Hpa spore production on response (R) populations of Arabidopsis Col-0 plants growing on soil conditioned (C) by populations of Col-0 plants inoculated with either mock-, Hpa-, or gnoHpa-spore suspensions. Asterisks indicate significant differences compared to mock-conditioned plants in a Dunnet's test. (B) Hpa spore production of Arabidopsis Col-0 plants growing in soil conditioned by populations of Col-0 or transgenic Col-0 RPP5 plants that had been mock inoculated or inoculated with a Hpa-spore suspensions. Spore production was quantified 7 days post inoculation and normalized to shoot fresh weight. Asterisks indicate significance level in Student's t-test compared to mock conditioned plants per plant genotype. (C-H) Cumulative relative abundance of 52 HAM ASVs in the phyllosphere (C,E,G) or rhizosphere (D,E,F) of a conditioning (C,D) or response population of Arabidopsis Col-0 plants. Colors indicate the taxonomy of 19 distinct HAM ASVs that together comprise the top-15 most-abundant HAM ASVs in the phyllosphere and rhizosphere. Colors correspond to single HAM ASVs, except for the genera Acidovorax, Rhizobium and Stenotrophomonas which are represented by 2 HAM ASVs. Asterisks indicate significance level in fdr-corrected Student's t-test compared to mock-treated (C), or mock-treated mock-conditioned (E-H) plant populations. All bars and error bars indicate the average and standard error, respectively, of ≥ 10 replicate pots. *: P < 0.05; **: P < 0.01; ***: P < 0.001. NS: Not significant.
Congruent downy mildew-associated microbiomes reduce plant disease and function as transferable resistobiomes

March 2023

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56 Reads

Root-associated microbiota can protect plants against severe disease outbreaks. In the model-plant Arabidopsis thaliana , leaf infection with the obligate downy mildew pathogen Hyaloperonospora arabidopsidis ( Hpa ) results in a shift in the root exudation profile, therewith promoting the growth of a selective root microbiome that induces a systemic resistance against Hpa in the above-ground plant parts. Here we show that, additionally, a conserved subcommunity of the recruited soil microbiota becomes part of a pathogen-associated microbiome in the phyllosphere that is vertically transmitted with the spores of the pathogen to consecutively infected host plants. This subcommunity of Hpa -associated microbiota (HAM) limits pathogen infection and is therefore coined a “resistobiome”. The HAM resistobiome consists of a small number of bacterial species and was first found in our routinely maintained laboratory cultures of independent Hpa strains. When co-inoculated with Hpa spores, the HAM rapidly dominates the phyllosphere of infected plants, negatively impacting Hpa spore formation. Remarkably, isogenic bacterial isolates of the abundantly-present HAM species were also found in strictly separated Hpa cultures across Europe, and even in early published genomes of this obligate biotroph. Our results highlight that pathogen-infected plants can recruit protective microbiota via their roots to the shoots where they become part of a pathogen-associated resistobiome that helps the plant to fight pathogen infection. Understanding the mechanisms by which pathogen-associated resistobiomes are formed will enable the development of microbiome-assisted crop varieties that rely less on chemical crop protection.


Bioengineered intestinal tubules as a tool to test intestinal biological efficacy of lettuce species

December 2022

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15 Reads

npj Science of Food

Lettuce (Lactuca sativa) is one of the most consumed and cultivated vegetables globally. Its breeding is focused on the improvement of yield and disease resistance. However, potential detrimental or beneficial health effects for the consumer are often not targeted in the breeding programs. Here, a bioengineered intestinal tubule was used to assess the intestinal efficacy of extracts from five plant accessions belonging to four Lactuca species. These four species include the domesticated L. sativa, closely related wild species L. serriola, and phylogenetically more distant wild relatives L. saligna and L. virosa. We assessed the epithelial barrier integrity, cell viability, cell attachment, brush border enzyme activity, and immune markers. Extracts from L. sativa cv. Salinas decreased cell attachment and brush border enzyme activity. However, extracts from the non-edible wild species L. saligna and L. virosa reduced the epithelial barrier functions, cell attachment, cell viability, and brush border enzyme activity. Since wild species represent a valuable germplasm pool, the bioengineered intestinal tubules could open ways to evaluate the safety and nutritional properties of the lettuce breeding material originating from crosses with wild Lactuca species.


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Wild and domesticated lettuce species differ in intestinal biological efficacy

July 2022

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17 Reads

Lettuce ( Lactuca sativa ) is one of the most consumed and cultivated vegetables globally. Its breeding is focused on the improvement of yield and disease resistance. However, potential detrimental or beneficial health effects for the consumer are often not targeted in the breeding programs. Here, a bioengineered intestinal tubule was used to assess the intestinal efficacy of extracts from five plant accessions belonging to four Lactuca species. These four species include the domesticated L. sativa , closely related wild species L. serriola , and phylogenetically more distant wild relatives L. saligna and L. virosa . We assessed the epithelial barrier integrity, cell viability, cell attachment, brush border enzyme activity, and immune markers. Extracts from L. sativa cv. Salinas decreased cell attachment and brush border enzyme activity. However, extracts from the non-edible wild species L. saligna and L. virosa strongly affected epithelial barrier, cell attachment, cell viability, and brush border enzyme activity. Since wild species represent a valuable germplasm pool, the bioengineered intestinal tubules could open ways to evaluate the safety and nutritional properties of the lettuce breeding material originating from crosses with wild Lactuca species.


Necrosis and Ethylene‐inducing‐Like Peptide patterns from crop pathogens induce differential responses within seven Brassicaceous species

July 2022

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41 Reads

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2 Citations

Plant Pathology

Translational research is required to advance fundamental knowledge on plant immunity towards application in crop improvement. Recognition of Microbe/Pathogen Associated Molecular Patterns (MAMPs/PAMPs) triggers a first layer of immunity in plants. The broadly occurring family of necrosis and ethylene‐inducing peptide 1 (NEP1)‐like proteins (NLPs) contains immunogenic peptide patterns that are recognized by a number of plant species. Arabidopsis can recognise NLP peptides by the pattern recognition receptor AtRLP23 and its co‐receptors SOBIR1, BAK1 and BKK1 leading to induction of defence responses including the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and elevation of intracellular [Ca2+]. However, little is known about NLP perception in Brassica crop species Within 12 diverse accessions for each of six Brassica crop species, we demonstrate variation in response to Botrytis cinerea NLP BcNEP2, with B. oleracea (CC genome) being non‐responsive and only two B. napus cultivars responding to BcNEP2. Peptides derived from four fungal pathogens of these crop species elicited responses similar to BcNEP2 in B. napus and Arabidopsis. Induction of ROS by NLP peptides was strongly reduced in Atrlp23, Atsobir1 and Atbak1‐5bkk1‐1 mutants, confirming that recognition of Brassica pathogen NLPs occurs in a similar manner to that of HaNLP3 from Hyaloperonospora arabidopsidis in Arabidopsis. In silico analysis of the genomes of two B. napus accessions showed similar presence of homologues for AtBAK1, AtBKK1 and AtSOBIR1 but variation in the organisation of AtRLP23 homologues. We could not detect a strong correlation between the ability to respond to NLP peptides and resistance to B. cinerea.


Signs and symptoms of plant-pathogen interactions. Depicted skeletal formulas are glucose, representing primary metabolism, and cinnamic acid, representing secondary metabolism
Physical paths of electromagnetic radiation in biological samples and their detection using non-invasive sensors. Passive (ambient light) or active radiation can be used to illuminate or excite the sample. Radiation can be reflected, transmitted, scattered, absorbed and re-emitted by the sample to varying degrees. The characteristic radiation can then be measured with sensors positioned on the side of the
source of illumination or on the opposite side of the sample
Sensor-based phenotyping of above-ground plant-pathogen interactions

March 2022

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265 Reads

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19 Citations

Plant Methods

Plant pathogens cause yield losses in crops worldwide. Breeding for improved disease resistance and management by precision agriculture are two approaches to limit such yield losses. Both rely on detecting and quantifying signs and symptoms of plant disease. To achieve this, the field of plant phenotyping makes use of non-invasive sensor technology. Compared to invasive methods, this can offer improved throughput and allow for repeated measurements on living plants. Abiotic stress responses and yield components have been successfully measured with phenotyping technologies, whereas phenotyping methods for biotic stresses are less developed, despite the relevance of plant disease in crop production. The interactions between plants and pathogens can lead to a variety of signs (when the pathogen itself can be detected) and diverse symptoms (detectable responses of the plant). Here, we review the strengths and weaknesses of a broad range of sensor technologies that are being used for sensing of signs and symptoms on plant shoots, including monochrome, RGB, hyperspectral, fluorescence, chlorophyll fluorescence and thermal sensors, as well as Raman spectroscopy, X-ray computed tomography, and optical coherence tomography. We argue that choosing and combining appropriate sensors for each plant-pathosystem and measuring with sufficient spatial resolution can enable specific and accurate measurements of above-ground signs and symptoms of plant disease.


Figure 1. The grapevine DMR6 and DLO protein family. (A) Multiple alignment of grapevine DMR6 and DLO proteins with Zea mays ZmFNSI (NP_001151167) [40], Hordeum vulgare HvDMR6 (KAE8782493.1) [41], Solanum lycopersicon SlDMR6-1 (Solyc03g080190) and SlDMR6-2 (Solyc06g073080) [13], Solanum tuberosum StDMR6 (XP_006347521) [15], Ocimum basilicum ObDMR6 (QWT44767.1) [17], Musa acuminata MusaDMR6 (XP_009389864.1) [16], Arabidopsis thaliana AtDLO1 (At4g10500), AtDLO2 (At4g10490), and AtDMR6 (AT5G24530) [11]. The alignment is coloured with the default ClustalX colour scheme according to the amino acid chemical properties. The ordering of the sequences is based on pairwise similarity. Motifs that are important for the catalytic function are highlighted: the HDH motif (blue background), the NYYPPCP motif (dark grey), and the WRDY/FLRL motif (light grey)-specific to the DMR6 and DLO proteins. (B) Phylogenetic tree of the
Figure 2. VviDMR6-1 is an ortholog of the Arabidopsis DMR6 gene. (A) Increased DM-susceptibility of Arabidopsis lines overexpressing VviDMR6-1: blue bars represent the spore count (thousand spores) of H. arabidopsidis at 6 dpi in four T2 overexpressing lines (Lines 1 to 4). Eight to ten plants per genotype were inoculated and assessed at 6 dpi in two replicate experiments. Error bars represent standard deviations (n = 2). Statistically significant differences are indicated with different letters, according to the Tukey HSD test (p < 0.05). (B) Complementation of the dmr6-1 mutant: blue bars represent the spore counts of H. arabidopsidis per milligram of leaf (fresh weight). The data include three independent T1 plants (Lines 1 to 3) that show complementation of the dmr6-1-resistant phenotype as they become highly susceptible as compared to the parental line (Ler eds1-2, [42]) and complementation line (dmr6-1 35S:DMR6). Error bars represent standard deviations (n = 10). Statistically significant differences are indicated with different letters, according to the Tukey HSD test (p < 0.05).
Figure 5. Expression analysis in leaf sectors under P. viticola pressure. (A) NRQs of VviDMR6-1, VviDMR6-2, VviDLO1, and VviDLO2 transcripts in fresh leaves either inoculated with P. viticola at 24 hpi or non-inoculated. (B) NRQs of VviDMR6-1 and VviDMR6-2 in leaves treated with water (non-inoculated) or with P. viticola (inoculated). Gene expression analyses were carried out on microdissected sectors (0.7-0.8 mm 2 ): guard cells, surrounding cells, and fixed leaves (nondissected). (C) Microdissected samples were harvested from non-inoculated samples, inoculated (local-inoculated), or non-inoculated areas of inoculated leaves (distal-inoculated). Mean NRQ levels and standard error values from eight replicates pooled from two experiments are presented for each sample. Different letters indicate significant differences according to Fisher's test (p < 0.05). Letters are omitted in the cases of non-significant differences.
Figure 6. Gene expression meta-analysis of grapevine DMR6 and DLO genes in different pathosystems. The heat plots display the distribution of the expression values of grapevine DMR6 and DLO genes across experiments investigating the response to P. viticola, E. necator, and B. cinerea and collected in VESPUCCI. The expression values are calculated as ratios on a log2 scale between a sample and its reference: either a healthy and an infected sample or between the indicated time point and the time point of the inoculation with the pathogen. The expression values were grouped according to cultivar resistance in the first two cases and on the basis of berry developmental stages in the third case. The NCBI accession numbers of the considered experiments are reported in Table S3.
Grapevine DMR6-1 Is a Candidate Gene for Susceptibility to Downy Mildew

January 2022

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229 Reads

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17 Citations

Biomolecules

Grapevine (Vitis vinifera) is a valuable crop in Europe for both economical and cultural reasons, but highly susceptible to Downy mildew (DM). The generation of resistant vines is of critical importance for a sustainable viticulture and can be achieved either by introgression of resistance genes in susceptible varieties or by mutation of Susceptibility (S) genes, e.g., by gene editing. This second approach offers several advantages: it maintains the genetic identity of cultivars otherwise disrupted by crossing and generally results in a broad-spectrum and durable resistance, but it is hindered by the poor knowledge about S genes in grapevines. Candidate S genes are Downy mildew Resistance 6 (DMR6) and DMR6-Like Oxygenases (DLOs), whose mutations confer resistance to DM in Arabidopsis. In this work, we show that grapevine VviDMR6-1 complements the Arabidopsis dmr6-1 resistant mutant. We studied the expression of grapevine VviDMR6 and VviDLO genes in different organs and in response to the DM causative agent Plasmopara viticola. Through an automated evaluation of causal relationships among genes, we show that VviDMR6-1, VviDMR6-2, and VviDLO1 group into different co-regulatory networks, suggesting distinct functions, and that mostly VviDMR6-1 is connected with pathogenesis-responsive genes. Therefore, VviDMR6-1 represents a good candidate to produce resistant cultivars with a gene-editing approach.


Citations (14)


... However, SA accumulation also penalizes growth, which contributes to the well-known growth-immunity trade-off in plants. van Butselaar et al. (2024) investigated the roles of basal SA levels in unchallenged plants and reported that basal SA levels are essential for the expression of a subset of immune system components that enable early pathogen detection and activation of immunity. This study provides valuable insight into a fundamental question related to SA and plant immunity. ...

Reference:

Key Challenges in Plant Pathology in the Next Decade
The Role of Salicylic Acid in the Expression of RECEPTOR-LIKE PROTEIN 23 and Other Immunity-Related Genes
  • Citing Article
  • April 2024

Phytopathology

... Using tomato in a split-root system assay, we showed that FOL inoculation in the local pot impacts the composition and disease suppressiveness status of the rhizosphere microbiota in the systemic pot ( Fig. 1). Importantly, since this systemic effect was detected in the rhizosphere-which extends beyond the host tissues into the soil-it is plausible to assume that this effect can be transferred to the next generation of plants growing in that soil 20,27 . By characterizing a collection of bacterial isolates from the tomato rhizosphere, we showed that FOL infection primarily altered the colonization of specific plantbeneficial taxa, i.e., bacteria reducing FOL symptoms, in the systemic pots (Fig. 3). ...

Obligate biotroph downy mildew consistently induces near-identical protective microbiomes in Arabidopsis thaliana

Nature Microbiology

... This provided a rich supply of anthocyanins. In particular, we also identified that the anthocyanin content of the cobs and husks was much higher than that of the other types of organs (Table 3), providing specific target organs for anthocyanin extraction [19,20,72]. Notably, purple corn is increasingly consumed as a fresh vegetable in Asian countries because of the health-promoting properties of the anthocyanin pigments in its aleurone or pericarp [73][74][75][76], which means that by-products such as its cobs and husk can be used as premium industrial raw materials for anthocyanin extraction. ...

Sensor-based phenotyping of above-ground plant-pathogen interactions

Plant Methods

... Transgenic approaches and genome editing have been used to assess whether S-genes could be manipulated for disease control in crop species ( Table 3). The Arabidopsis DMR6 orthologue from grapevine, VviDMR6, has been identified and demonstrated that VviDMR6 can complement Arabidopsis dmr6-1 resistant mutant [71], suggesting that mutation in this gene through gene editing technologies could be explored for downy mildew resistance in grapevine. Accordingly, editing of the DMR6 orthologue from grapevine with CRISPR/Cas9 system improved resistance to downy mildew [72]. ...

Grapevine DMR6-1 Is a Candidate Gene for Susceptibility to Downy Mildew

Biomolecules

... The differences in the expression of substances in the SA pathway mostly occur in plants after pathogen attacks, but insects can also induce synergistic SA and JA signaling transduction; plants can also preemptively initiate resistance to pathogens through the SA pathway [39]. SA can be generated in plants through two pathways involving the synthesis of either phenylalanine or isovaleric acid, both of which use p-coumaric acid as a reaction precursor. ...

Insect eggs trigger systemic acquired resistance against a fungal and an oomycete pathogen
New Phytologist

New Phytologist

... In the absence of wheat varieties completely immune to FHB (Dweba et al., 2017;Hu et al., 2022;Moonjely et al., 2023), strategies focusing on modifying susceptibility genes present a viable alternative for FHB control. While these strategies to enhance resistance are well-documented in numerous plant-pathogen interactions (Garcia-Ruiz et al., 2021), research in the context of FHB remains limited (Fabre et al., 2020;Gorash et al., 2021). ...

Stop helping pathogens: engineering plant susceptibility genes for durable resistance

Current Opinion in Biotechnology

... The primary applications of OCT are in biomedical imaging and diagnosis, including fields such as ophthalmology [5], dermatology [6], oncology [7], and dentistry [8]. Furthermore, OCT has been utilized in non-biomedical areas such as art conservation for non-destructive analysis [9], botany [10], fruit quality assessment [11]. ...

Quantification of plant morphology and leaf thickness with optical coherence tomography

... Among the available model organisms, Arabidopsis thaliana stands out due to its genetic tractability, well-documented genome, and ease of transformation. Over time, Arabidopsis has become a favored choice for elucidating the complexities of host-pathogen interplay [9,10]. Table 1. ...

Oomycetes Used in Arabidopsis Research
  • Citing Article
  • August 2019

The Arabidopsis Book

... Phytophthora infestans infection has an initial biotrophic phase that does not trigger cell death, synthesizing defense responses such as PHE through the salicylic acid pathway (25) . A decrease in the synthesis of defense compounds is observed during the necrotrophic phase, where the destruction of the host cell occurs (26) . In a similar study, Attia and others (27) observed that eggplants (Solanum melongena L.) with symptoms of early blight (Alternaria solani) showed up to 77.21% more PHE at 60 days after planting, and up to 125.47% and 25.07% ...

Fungal and Oomycete Biotrophy
  • Citing Chapter
  • April 2018

... Crops must be able to respond to different stimuli throughout the growth and development process; also, they experience increased pathogen pressure due to reduced There is evidence of differential susceptibility to Pss between sweet cherry cultivars [13,46,47] dependent on the chemical response involved in plant immunity to Ps in plants based on both PTI and ETI [48], which ultimately generates SAR through the SA defense response [23]. The SA-induced defense response has deleterious effects on plant growth [28], but the extent of the defense response and its effect on growth remains elusive in fruit tree species and especially in sweet cherry varieties, especially on those with differential susceptibility to Pss. Additionally, the effects of the defense response on growth during the summer season in sweet cherry plants have not been thoroughly explored. ...

Salicylic Acid Steers the Growth–Immunity Tradeoff
  • Citing Article
  • March 2020

Trends in Plant Science