Molecular Plant-Microbe Interactions (May 1999)

Isolation of the LEMMI9 Gene and Promoter Analysis During a Compatible Plant-Nematode Interaction

  • Carolina Escobar,
  • Jan De Meutter,
  • Fabio A. Aristizábal,
  • Soledad Sanz-Alférez,
  • Francisca F. del Campo,
  • Nathalie Barthels,
  • Walter Van der Eycken,
  • Jef Seurinck,
  • Marc van Montagu,
  • Godelieve Gheysen,
  • Carmen Fenoll

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1094/MPMI.1999.12.5.440
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 5
pp. 440 – 449

Abstract

Read online

Plant-endoparasitic root-knot nematodes feed on specialized giant cells that they induce in the vascular cylinder of susceptible plants. Although it has been established that a number of plant genes change their expression pattern during giant cell differentiation, virtually no data are available about the mechanisms involved in that change. One possibility is differential promoter recognition by the transcription factor(s) responsible for the expression of specific genes. We have isolated and characterized a genomic clone from tomato containing the promoter region of LEMMI9, one of the few plant genes that have been reported to be highly expressed in galls (predominantly in giant cells). The analysis of transgenic potato plants carrying a LEMMI9 promoter-β glucuronidase (GUS) fusion has demonstrated that the tomato promoter was activated in Meloidogyne incognita-induced galls in a heterologous system. We have located putative regulatory sequences in the promoter and have found that nuclear proteins from the galls formed specific DNA-protein complexes with the proximal region of the LEMMI9 promoter. The nuclear protein-binding sequence mapped to a region of 111 bp immediately upstream from the TATA box. This region contains a 12-bp repeat possibly involved in the formation of DNA-protein complexes, which might be related to the LEMMI9 transcriptional activation in the giant cells.

Keywords