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An international research group led by Prof. Haiping Wang at IVF-CAAS sheds light on the molecular mechanisms of Ca2+ sensor BraCBL1.2 in clubroot resistance in Chinese cabbage

01.15.24 | Plant Phenomics

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Chinese cabbage ( Brassica rapa L. ssp pekinensis ) is one of the most important leafy vegetables cultivated worldwide. Clubroot disease caused by a soil-borne obligate biotrophic Plasmodiophora brassicae ( Pb ) severely affects the yield and quality of cruciferous crops, especially Chinese Cabbage. BraCRa , as one of the earliest cloned clubroot resistance gene, confers race-specific resistance to Pb . As TNL-type resistance (R) gene in plant, BraCRa is supposed to induce Ca 2+ influx with the help of Ca 2+ permeable channel. However, the identity of downstream Ca 2+ sensors and decoders of BraCRa are still elusive.

A manuscript entitled “ A Ca 2+ sensor BraCBL1.2 involves in BraCRa-mediated clubroot resistance in Chinese cabbage ” published as article in “ Horticulture Research ”.

The aim of this study is to identify the specific isolates of Pb protested by BraCRa and identify the downstream Ca 2+ sensor of CRa . In this study, the spatial and temporal expression pattern of BraCRa were investigated by histochemical staining in Arabidopsis . CRa is primarily expressed in root hair cells and its protein is localized in cytoplasm and plasma membrane. Moreover, we screened multiple virulent and avirulent Pb isolates of Chinese Cabbage line CR 3-2, which harbors BraCRa . BraCRa exhibits board-spectrum Pb resistance in B. rapa . Through transcriptomic analysis, we identified a plasma membrane-localized Ca 2+ sensor BraCBL1.2 functions downstream of BraCRa upon Pb infection. Additionally, BraCBL1.2 exhibited similar spatial and temporal expression pattern with BraCRa . Furthermore, we developed a tobacco-based HR assay to prove the involvement of BraCBL1.2 in BraCRa-mediated ETI response. Finally, we verified that overexpression of BraCBL1.2 enhanced clubroot resistance in Arabidopsis . Therefore, our study firstly demonstrated that BraCRa exerts clubroot resistance in root hair cell of cruciferous plants and identified BraCBL1.2 as one of the downstream Ca 2+ sensor of BraCRa during Pb infection.

Collectively, this study identified the involvement of a Ca 2+ sensor in BraCRa-mediated clubroot resistance in Chinese cabbage, providing a theoretical basis for further research on the resistance of Chinese cabbage to P . brassicae .

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References

Authors

Yinglan Piao 1 , Shizhen Li 3 , Yiduo Chen 4 , Sisi Zhao 1 , Zhongyun piao 2 * , Haiping Wang 1 *

Affiliations

1 State Key Laboratory of Vegetable Biobreeding, Institute of Vegetables and Flowers, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Beijing 100081, China

2 College of Horticulture, Shenyang Agricultural University, Shenyang 110866, China

3 State Key Laboratory of Plant Cell and Chromosome Engineering, Institute of Genetics and Developmental Biology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100101, China

4 Institut für Biologie und Biotechnologie der Pflanzen, Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität, Münster, Germany

About Prof. Haiping Wang & Prof. Zhongyun Piao

Prof. Haiping Wang

Key areas of interest include garlic, ginger, radish and cucumber genetics and development of genomic tools, genetic improvement of garlic disease resistance, garlic diversity and origins, and of human nutritional quality and flavor of both garlic and ginger.

Prof. Zhongyun Piao

Research on germplasm resource innovation, disease resistance mechanisms, cloning and functional analysis of important genes, and molecular breeding of Brassica crops such as Chinese cabbage and rapeseed.

Horticulture Research

10.1093/hr/uhad261

Experimental study

Not applicable

A Ca2+ sensor BraCBL1.2 involves in BraCRa-mediated clubroot resistance in Chinese cabbage

13-Dec-2023

The authors declare that they have no competing interests.

Keywords

Article Information

Contact Information

Ping Wang
Nanjing Agricultural University The Academy of Science
pingwang@njau.edu.cn

Source

How to Cite This Article

APA:
Plant Phenomics. (2024, January 15). An international research group led by Prof. Haiping Wang at IVF-CAAS sheds light on the molecular mechanisms of Ca2+ sensor BraCBL1.2 in clubroot resistance in Chinese cabbage. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/L3R4VOY8/an-international-research-group-led-by-prof-haiping-wang-at-ivf-caas-sheds-light-on-the-molecular-mechanisms-of-ca2-sensor-bracbl12-in-clubroot-resistance-in-chinese-cabbage.html
MLA:
"An international research group led by Prof. Haiping Wang at IVF-CAAS sheds light on the molecular mechanisms of Ca2+ sensor BraCBL1.2 in clubroot resistance in Chinese cabbage." Brightsurf News, Jan. 15 2024, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/L3R4VOY8/an-international-research-group-led-by-prof-haiping-wang-at-ivf-caas-sheds-light-on-the-molecular-mechanisms-of-ca2-sensor-bracbl12-in-clubroot-resistance-in-chinese-cabbage.html.