Plants (Dec 2020)

Mutations Found in the <i>Asc1</i> Gene That Confer Susceptibility to the AAL-Toxin in Ancestral Tomatoes from Peru and Mexico

  • Rin Tsuzuki,
  • Rosa María Cabrera Pintado,
  • Jorge Andrés Biondi Thorndike,
  • Dina Lida Gutiérrez Reynoso,
  • Carlos Alberto Amasifuen Guerra,
  • Juan Carlos Guerrero Abad,
  • Liliana Maria Aragón Caballero,
  • Medali Heidi Huarhua Zaquinaula,
  • Cledy Ureta Sierra,
  • Olenka Ines Alberca Cruz,
  • Milca Gianira Elespuru Suna,
  • Raúl Humberto Blas Sevillano,
  • Ines Carolina Torres Arias,
  • Joel Flores Ticona,
  • Fátima Cáceres de Baldárrago,
  • Enrique Rodoríguez Pérez,
  • Takuo Hozum,
  • Hiroki Saito,
  • Shunsuke Kotera,
  • Yasunori Akagi,
  • Motoichiro Kodama,
  • Ken Komatsu,
  • Tsutomu Arie

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/plants10010047
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 1
p. 47

Abstract

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Tomato susceptibility/resistance to stem canker disease caused by Alternaria alternata f. sp. lycopersici and its pathogenic factor AAL-toxin is determined by the presence of the Asc1 gene. Several cultivars of commercial tomato (Solanum lycopersicum var. lycopersicum, SLL) are reported to have a mutation in Asc1, resulting in their susceptibility to AAL-toxin. We evaluated 119 ancestral tomato accessions including S. pimpinellifolium (SP), S. lycopersicum var. cerasiforme (SLC) and S. lycopersicum var. lycopersicum “jitomate criollo” (SLJ) for AAL-toxin susceptibility. Three accessions, SP PER018805, SLC PER018894, and SLJ M5-3, were susceptible to AAL-toxin. SLC PER018894 and SLJ M5-3 had a two-nucleotide deletion (nt 854_855del) in Asc1 identical to that found in SLL cv. Aichi-first. Another mutation (nt 931_932insT) that may confer AAL-toxin susceptibility was identified in SP PER018805. In the phylogenetic tree based on the 18 COSII sequences, a clade (S3) is composed of SP, including the AAL-toxin susceptible PER018805, and SLC. AAL-toxin susceptible SLC PER018894 and SLJ M5-3 were in Clade S2 with SLL cultivars. As SLC is thought to be the ancestor of SLL, and SLJ is an intermediate tomato between SLC and SLL, Asc1s with/without the mutation seem to have been inherited throughout the history of tomato domestication and breeding.

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