Current Plant Biology (Jun 2024)
Unravelling the role of key genes involved coffee leaf rust resistance
Abstract
The biotrophic fungus Hemileia vastatrix is the pathogen responsible for coffee leaf rust, a devastating disease in several coffee-producing countries. Despite the importance of studying the interaction between Coffea and H. vastatrix, a more comprehensive understanding of the mechanisms involved in this pathosystem is necessary. The role of eight candidate genes was analyzed aiming at identifying and validating new important coffee resistance genes and understanding their interaction with H. vastatrix. These genes were identified in the most important sources of coffee resistance, the Híbrido de Timor CIFC 832/2 and CIFC 832/1. Previous works found six resistance genes and, in our research, other two new genes were identified in BAC clones and validated by RT-qPCR during compatible and incompatible interactions between Coffea and H. vastatrix. An interactome approach was performed using Coffea-H. vastatrix and Coffea-Coffea proteins to better understand the biological process and the interaction of the host-pathogen. Two networks of interactions from the compiled data were built focused on candidate genes associated with pre-haustorial resistance (12 and 24 h.a.i) in coffee plants against the pathogen. The results showed, for the first time, differentially expressed proteins (DEPs) positively regulated in the incompatible interaction Coffea-H. vastatrix. These coffee proteins interact with each other and with secreted and/or transmembrane pathogen proteins. The obtained results also show that DEPs found are involved in important plant defense pathways such as pathways associated with the response to wounds, signaling, regulation of the innate immune response and the transmembrane receptor protein serine/threonine kinase pathway. The present work shows the involvement of genes in both pathogen recognition and signaling cascades, which act in pre-haustorial defense mechanisms of HdT coffee. Therefore, the candidate genes analyzed, together with the biological processes elucidated, have the potential to contribute to the development of new control strategies against the fungus H. vastatrix within coffee breeding programs aiming to develop cultivars with durable resistance.