Disease resistance genes encoding nucleotide-binding and leucine-rich repeat (NLR) intracellular immune receptor proteins detect pathogens by the presence of pathogen effectors. Plant genomes typically contain hundreds of NLR-encoding genes. The availability of the hexaploid wheat (Triticum aestivum) cultivar Chinese Spring reference genome allows a detailed study of its NLR complement. However, low NLR expression and high intra-family sequence homology hinders their accurate annotation. Here we developed NLR-Annotator, a software tool for in silico NLR identification independent of transcript support. Although developed for wheat, we demonstrate the universal applicability of NLR-Annotator across diverse plant taxa. We applied our tool to wheat and combined it with a transcript-validated subset of genes from the reference gene annotation to characterize the structure, phylogeny and expression profile of the NLR gene family. We detected 3,400 full-length NLR loci of which 1,560 were confirmed as expressed genes with intact open reading frames. NLRs with integrated domains mostly group in specific subclades. Members of another subclade predominantly locate in close physical proximity to NLRs carrying integrated domains, suggesting a paired helper-function. Most NLRs (88%) display low basal expression (in the lower 10 percentile of transcripts). In young leaves subjected to biotic stress we found upregulation of 266 of the NLRs. To illustrate the utility of our tool for the positional cloning of resistance genes, we estimated the number of NLR genes within the intervals of mapped rust resistance genes. Our study will support the identification of functional resistance genes in wheat to accelerate the breeding and engineering of disease-resistant varieties.
Late blight caused by
Phytophthora infestans
greatly constrains potato production. Many
Resistance (R)
genes were cloned from wild
Solanum
species and/or introduced into potato cultivars by breeding. However, individual
R
genes have been overcome by
P. infestans
evolution; durable resistance remains elusive. We positionally cloned a new
R
gene,
Rpi-amr1,
from
Solanum americanum
, that encodes an NRC helper-dependent CC-NLR protein.
Rpi-amr1
confers resistance in potato to all 19
P. infestans
isolates tested. Using association genomics and long-read RenSeq, we defined eight additional
Rpi-amr1
alleles from different
S. americanum
and related species.Despite only ~90% identity between Rpi-amr1 proteins, all confer late blight resistance but differentially recognize
Avramr1
orthologs and paralogs. We propose that
Rpi-amr1
gene family diversity assists detection of diverse paralogs and alleles of the recognized effector, facilitating durable resistance against
P. infestans
.
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