International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Jan 2023)

The <i>Bph45</i> Gene Confers Resistance against Brown Planthopper in Rice by Reducing the Production of Limonene

  • Charng-Pei Li,
  • Dong-Hong Wu,
  • Shou-Horng Huang,
  • Menghsiao Meng,
  • Hsien-Tzung Shih,
  • Ming-Hsin Lai,
  • Liang-Jwu Chen,
  • Kshirod K. Jena,
  • Sherry Lou Hechanova,
  • Ting-Jyun Ke,
  • Tai-Yuan Chiu,
  • Zong-Yuan Tsai,
  • Guo-Kai Chen,
  • Kuan-Chieh Tsai,
  • Wei-Ming Leu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms24021798
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 2
p. 1798

Abstract

Read online

Brown planthopper (BPH), a monophagous phloem feeder, consumes a large amount of photoassimilates in rice and causes wilting. A near-isogenic line ‘TNG71-Bph45’ was developed from the Oryza sativa japonica variety ‘Tainung 71 (TNG71) carrying a dominant BPH-resistance locus derived from Oryza nivara (IRGC 102165) near the centromere of chromosome 4. We compared the NIL (TNG71-Bph45) and the recurrent parent to explore how the Bph45 gene confers BPH resistance. We found that TNG71-Bph45 is less attractive to BPH at least partially because it produces less limonene. Chiral analysis revealed that the major form of limonene in both rice lines was the L-form. However, both L- and D-limonene attracted BPH when applied exogenously to TNG71-Bph45 rice. The transcript amounts of limonene synthase were significantly higher in TNG71 than in TNG71-Bph45 and were induced by BPH infestation only in the former. Introgression of the Bph45 gene into another japonica variety, Tainan 11, also resulted in a low limonene content. Moreover, several dominantly acting BPH resistance genes introduced into the BPH-sensitive IR24 line compromised its limonene-producing ability and concurrently decreased its attractiveness to BPH. These observations suggest that reducing limonene production may be a common resistance strategy against BPH in rice.

Keywords