Molecular Plant-Microbe Interactions (Sep 2013)

A Replicase of Potato virus X Acts as the Resistance-Breaking Determinant for JAX1-Mediated Resistance

  • Kyoko Sugawara,
  • Takuya Shiraishi,
  • Tetsuya Yoshida,
  • Naoko Fujita,
  • Osamu Netsu,
  • Yasuyuki Yamaji,
  • Shigetou Namba

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1094/MPMI-04-13-0094-R
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26, no. 9
pp. 1106 – 1112

Abstract

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Lectin-mediated resistance (LMR) has been suggested to comprise an uncharacterized branch of antiviral plant innate immunity. To unveil the feature of resistance conferred by jacalin-type lectin required for potexvirus resistance 1 (JAX1), a recently isolated LMR gene against potexviruses, we analyzed the resistance-breaking variants to find the viral component involved in resistance. We employed grafting-mediated inoculation, a high-pressure virus inoculation method, to obtain Potato virus X (PVX) variants that can overcome JAX1-mediated resistance. Whole-genome sequencing of the variants suggested that a single amino acid in the methyl transferase domain of the replicase encoded by PVX is responsible for this resistance-breaking property. Reintroduction of the amino-acid substitution to avirulent wild-type PVX was sufficient to overcome the JAX1-mediated resistance. These results suggest that viral replicase is involved in JAX1-mediated resistance. The residue that determines the resistance-breaking properties was highly conserved among potexviruses, suggesting a general role of the residue in potexvirus–JAX1 interactions.