The Plant Genome (Jul 2020)

Initial responses of the trap‐crop, Solanum sisymbriifolium, to Globodera pallida invasions

  • Alexander Q. Wixom,
  • N. Carol Casavant,
  • Timothy J. Sonnen,
  • Joseph C. Kuhl,
  • Fangming Xiao,
  • Louise‐Marie Dandurand,
  • Allan B. Caplan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/tpg2.20016
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 2
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract Many researchers today are looking for mechanisms underlying plant defenses against nematodes by identifying differentially expressed genes in domesticated hosts. In order to provide a different perspective, we analyzed the root transcriptome of an undomesticated non‐host species, Solanum sisymbriifolium Lamark (SSI) before and after Globodera pallida infection. Utilizing RNAseq analyses, we identified changes in the expression of 277 transcripts. Many of these genes were not annotated; however, the annotated set included peroxidases, reactive oxygen species‐producing proteins, and regulators of cell death. Importantly, 60% of the nematode‐responsive genes did not respond to physical damage to root tissues, or to exogenous treatments with either salicylic acid or methyl jasmonate. Based on this, we speculate that the majority of changes in SSI gene expression were promoted by either nematode effectors, pathogen‐associated molecular patterns (PAMPs), or by exposure to untested endogenous signaling molecules such as ethylene, or by exposure to multiple stimuli. This study incorporates our findings into a model that accounts for part of this plant's unusual resistance to nematodes.