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The role of an AS1 co-repressor in plant defence
Reference
BB/H001298/1
Principal Investigator / Supervisor
Professor Andrew Hudson
Co-Investigators /
Co-Supervisors
Professor Gary Loake
Institution
University of Edinburgh
Department
Inst for Molecular Plant Science
Funding type
Research
Value (£)
373,007
Status
Completed
Type
Research Grant
Start date
09/09/2009
End date
31/03/2013
Duration
43 months
Abstract
We have found that the ASYMMETRIC LEAVES1 (AS1) myb transcription factor has a dual role in regulating disease resistance and leaf development in Arabidopsis. Its developmental, but not defence, function requires binding to the unrelated AS2 transcription factor. We have recently found that AS1 requires another protein, PIP, of unknown biochemical function, in order to repress defence genes and that AS1 and PIP can form heterodimers. The disease and defence roles of AS1 can therefore be separated with pip and as2 mutations. AS1 suppresses resistance to necrotrophic fungi by binding jasmonic-induced defence genes and repressing their transcription, suggesting that PIP is a transcriptional co-factor that is also needed for this repression. Here we will first confirm that PIP and AS1 form heterodimers in plants and test whether their activity responds to pathogens. We will then identify the defence processes that are regulated by PIP, AS1 and AS2, by testing the response of mutants to a panel of pathogens and pests and by identifying genes that are regulated by PIP, AS1 and AS2 alone or in combination and that bind AS1-PIP heterodimers directly. This will also reveal whether PIP is likely to a role outside defence, whether AS1 and PIP function only as transcriptional repressors and whether PIP and AS2 confer different DNA binding specificities on AS1 that can account for the different functions of AS1-PIP and AS1-AS2 heterodimers. Our final aim is to identify the advantages to the plant of maintaining PIP activity (which appears to decrease disease resistance without increasing performance). We will do this by testing the effects of different environmental factors on pip mutants and the performance of pip mutants in the field. Such knowledge should reveal whether breeding for reduced PIP activity is a feasible strategy to increase disease and pest resistance in crops.
Summary
It is important to understand how plants resist disease, not least because over 10% of crop yields are lost to disease and nearly 1 billion people are malnourished. Our understanding has come mostly from research on the brassica relative, Arabidopsis. Arabidopsis has shown that plants responds differently to pathogens such as the grey mold Botrytis - termed a necrotroph because it kills plant cells and feeds on their contents - and to biotrophic microorganisms and viruses which multiply in living plant tissue. When a plant senses an attacking biotroph it produces salicylic acid (SA) as a hormonal signal to induce resistance at the site of attack and elsewhere in the plant. In contrast, a plant produces jasmonic acid (JA), and sometimes ethylene (ET), when it senses a necrotrophic pathogen or is damaged by a herbivore. SA turns on the expression of a set of genes, some of which encode antimicrobial proteins, while JA and ET turn on different defence genes. Recently, we found that loss of the AS1 protein increases resistance to necrotrophic pathogens by allowing JA to induce defence genes to higher levels than normal. This came as a surprise because for over 10 years we had thought that the only role of AS1 was to control leaf development. (AS stands for Asymmetric Leaves and describes mutants lacking AS1 protein.) AS1 controls leaf development when it binds to a partner protein - called AS2 because its mutants are like AS1 mutants. Intriguingly, mutants lacking AS2 have normal disease resistance, implying that AS1 does not need its develpmental partner AS2 to regulate defence genes. More recently, we identified an additional partner of AS1, which we called PIP, and found that AS1 probably regulates defence genes only when bound to PIP. Importantly, while plants that lack PIP are more resistant to necrotrophs, they appear to develop normally and to show normal resistance to bacterial pathogens. Here we aim to understand more fully the role of PIP by identifying theprocesses and the genes that it regulates. In doing so, we will test the hypothesis that the sole effect of reducing PIP activity is to increase resistance to necrotrophic pathogens, and possible herbivores, providing the potential to breed plants with increased disease resistance without reducing yield or resorting to genetic manipulation. We will first confirm that PIP and AS1 bind to each other in the nuclei of plant cells and examine whether they are themselves regulated by pathogen or herbivore attack. We will then test whether plants lacking PIP are more resistant to a broad range of necrotrophic pathogens and to herbivores, while maintaining normal resistance to a range of biotrophs. We will also test resistance to aphids, which is suggested to involve SA signalling and so should be unaffected. In parallel, we will identify the genes that are regulated by AS1 and PIP, but not AS2, by sequencing all the genes that are expressed in plants lacking each of the proteins in turn. Because AS1 controls the expression of its target genes by binding to their DNA, we will also sequence the genes to which AS1 binds together with PIP. Predicting the functions of these genes from their DNA sequences will suggest whether PIP regulates only genes that are involved in defence, or whether it might have other roles. We will investigate any potentially new roles by examining whether they are altered in plants lacking PIP. We know that plants without PIP grow normally and are more resistant to Botrytis in the greenhouse. We will also test whether this is also true for plants growing naturally outside, and therefore whether breeding for reduced PIP activity might increase disease resistance without compromising yield.
Committee
Research Committee B (Plants, microbes, food & sustainability)
Research Topics
Crop Science, Plant Science
Research Priority
X – Research Priority information not available
Research Initiative
X - not in an Initiative
Funding Scheme
X – not Funded via a specific Funding Scheme
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