Race-specific resistance genes protect the global wheat crop from stem rust disease caused by f. sp. () but are often overcome owing to evolution of new virulent races of the pathogen. To understand virulence evolution in , we identified the protein ligand (AvrSr50) recognized by the Sr50 resistance protein. A spontaneous mutant of virulent to contained a 2.5 mega-base pair loss-of-heterozygosity event. A haustorial secreted protein from this region triggers-dependent defense responses in planta and interacts directly with the Sr50 protein. Virulence alleles of have arisen through DNA insertion and sequence divergence, and our data provide molecular evidence that in addition to sexual recombination, somatic exchange can play a role in the emergence of new virulence traits in.
Ultrasonic treatment (0.5-2 min) stimulated multiple shoot regeneration to high levels in vitro from recalcitrant cotyledon explants of commercial squash (Cucurbita pepo L.) cultivars Ma'yan and Bareqet, on Murashige and Skoog [Physiol Plant 15:473-497, 1962] (regeneration) medium augmented with 4.4 microM benzyladenine. At this stage, unsonicated control explants regenerated only a few very small shoots or bud-like structures. Ultrasound also stimulated massive explant growth. Ultrasound treatment resulted in further multiple shoot production (five times greater than control) after explant transfer to elongation medium (Murashige and Skoog [Physiol Plant 15:473-497, 1962] medium with 0.44 microM benzyladenine and 2.9 microM gibberellic acid). Longer ultrasonic treatments (5 or 10 min) promoted multiple shoot regeneration and explant growth accompanied by hyperhydration. Scanning electron microscope observations showed that 2 min ultrasound changed the joint area between epidermal cells and removed some of the surface from the cotyledon epidermal cells, without gross surface injury to the explants. Longer periods of ultrasound (5-10 min) caused further surface erosion. Rubbing the explant contact surface with chloroform or sandpaper emulated the effect of sonication on shoot regeneration and explant growth, demonstrating that ultrasound exerts its morphogenic influence by surface removal. Sonication of explants from other batches of squash seeds (of cultivars Ma'yan and True French), that regenerated without such treatment, reduced regeneration and caused hyperhydration. This is the first report of stimulation of in vitro regeneration by ultrasound treatment.
Semidwarfing genes have greatly increased wheat yields globally, yet the widely used gibberellin (GA)-insensitive genes
Rht-B1b
and
Rht-D1b
have disadvantages for seedling emergence. Use of the GA-sensitive semidwarfing gene
Rht13
avoids this pleiotropic effect. Here, we show that
Rht13
encodes a
nucleotide-binding site/leucine-rich repeat
(
NB-LRR
) gene. A point mutation in the semidwarf
Rht-B13b
allele autoactivates the
NB-LRR
gene and causes a height reduction comparable with
Rht-B1b
and
Rht-D1b
in diverse genetic backgrounds. The autoactive
Rht-B13b
allele leads to transcriptional up-regulation of pathogenesis-related genes including class III peroxidases associated with cell wall remodeling.
Rht13
represents a new class of reduced height (
Rht
) gene, unlike other
Rht
genes, which encode components of the GA signaling or metabolic pathways. This discovery opens avenues to use autoactive
NB-LRR
genes as semidwarfing genes in a range of crop species, and to apply
Rht13
in wheat breeding programs using a perfect genetic marker.
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