Global changes in Brassica napus gene activity in response to Sclerotinia sclerotiorum and the biocontrol agent Pseudomonas chlororaphis PA23

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Date
2016
Authors
Duke, Kelly
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Abstract
The biological control agent Pseudomonas chlororaphis PA23 is effective at protecting Brassica napus (canola) from the necrotrophic fungus Sclerotinia sclerotiorum via direct antagonism. Despite the growing importance of biocontrol bacteria in protecting crop plants from fungal pathogens, little is known about how the host plant responds to bacterial priming on the leaf surface and certainly nothing about global changes in gene activity in the presence and absence of S. sclerotiorum. PA23 priming of mature canola plants reduced the number of lesion-forming petals by 90%. Global RNA sequencing of canola tissue at the host-pathogen interface showed a 16-fold reduction in the number of genes uniquely upregulated in response to S. sclerotiorum when pretreated with PA23. Upstream defense-related gene patterns suggest MAMP-triggered immunity via surface receptors detecting PA23 flagellin and peptidoglycans. Although systemic acquired resistance (SAR) was induced in all treatment groups, a response centered around a glycerol-3-phosphate (G3P)-mediated pathway was exclusively observed in canola plants treated with PA23 alone. Activation of these defense mechanisms by PA23 involved production of reactive oxygen species as well as pronounced thylakoid membrane structures and plastoglobule formation in leaf chloroplasts. PA23 therefore primes defense responses in the plant through the induction of unique local and systemic regulatory networks.
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Biocontrol, Sclerotinia sclerotiorum, Brassica napus, Chloroplast, Pseudomonas chlororaphis PA23, RNA-seq, Reactive oxygen species, Systemic acquired resistance
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