The maize disease resistance gene Htn1 against northern corn leaf blight encodes a wall-associated receptor-like kinase
Year:2015
Bibliography
Hurni S*, Scheuermann D*, Krattinger SG*, Kessel B*, Wicker T, Herren G, Fitze MN, Breen J, Presterl T, Ouzunova M and Keller B (2015) The maize disease resistance gene Htn1 against northern corn leaf blight encodes a wall-associated receptor-like kinase. PNAS 112: 8780-8785.
Abstract
Northern corn leaf blight (NCLB) caused by the hemibiotrophic fungus Exserohilum turcicum is an important foliar disease of maize that is mainly controlled by growing resistant maize cultivars. The Htn1 locus confers quantitative and partial NCLB resistance by delaying the onset of lesion formation. Htn1
represents an important source of genetic resistance that was
originally introduced from a Mexican landrace into modern maize breeding
lines in the 1970s. Using a high-resolution map-based cloning approach,
we delimited Htn1 to a 131.7-kb physical interval on
chromosome 8 that contained three candidate genes encoding two
wall-associated receptor-like kinases (ZmWAK-RLK1 and ZmWAK-RLK2) and one wall-associated receptor-like protein (ZmWAK-RLP1). TILLING (targeting induced local lesions in genomes) mutants in ZmWAK-RLK1 were more susceptible to NCLB than wild-type plants, both in greenhouse experiments and in the field. ZmWAK-RLK1
contains a nonarginine-aspartate (non-RD) kinase domain, typically
found in plant innate immune receptors. Sequence comparison showed that
the extracellular domain of ZmWAK-RLK1 is highly diverse between
different maize genotypes. Furthermore, an alternative splice variant
resulting in a truncated protein was present at higher frequency in the
susceptible parents of the mapping populations compared with in the
resistant parents. Hence, the quantitative Htn1 disease
resistance in maize is encoded by an unusual innate immune receptor with
an extracellular wall-associated kinase domain. These results further
highlight the importance of this protein family in resistance to adapted
pathogens.