Molecular Horticulture (Feb 2022)

Missense mutation of a class B heat shock factor is responsible for the tomato bushy root-2 phenotype

  • Zoltan Kevei,
  • Silva Demetryus Silva Ferreira,
  • Cristina Maria Perez Casenave,
  • Tomasz Kurowski,
  • Fady Mohareb,
  • Daniel Rickett,
  • Chris Stain,
  • Andrew J. Thompson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s43897-022-00025-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract The bushy root-2 (brt-2) tomato mutant has twisting roots, and slower plant development. Here we used whole genome resequencing and genetic mapping to show that brt-2 is caused by a serine to cysteine (S75C) substitution in the DNA binding domain (DBD) of a heat shock factor class B (HsfB) encoded by SolycHsfB4a. This gene is orthologous to the Arabidopsis SCHIZORIZA gene, also known as AtHsfB4. The brt-2 phenotype is very similar to Arabidopsis lines in which the function of AtHsfB4 is altered: a proliferation of lateral root cap and root meristematic tissues, and a tendency for lateral root cap cells to easily separate. The brt-2 S75C mutation is unusual because all other reported amino acid substitutions in the highly conserved DBD of eukaryotic heat shock factors are dominant negative mutations, but brt-2 is recessive. We further show through reciprocal grafting that brt-2 exerts its effects predominantly through the root genotype even through BRT-2 is expressed at similar levels in both root and shoot meristems. Since AtHsfB4 is induced by root knot nematodes (RKN), and loss-of-function mutants of this gene are resistant to RKNs, BRT-2 could be a target gene for RKN resistance, an important trait in tomato rootstock breeding. Gene & accession numbers SolycHsfB4a - Solyc04g078770.

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