| Literature DB >> 16626454 |
Steven Ralph1, Claire Oddy, Dawn Cooper, Hesther Yueh, Sharon Jancsik, Natalia Kolosova, Ryan N Philippe, Dana Aeschliman, Rick White, Dezene Huber, Carol E Ritland, François Benoit, Tracey Rigby, André Nantel, Yaron S N Butterfield, Robert Kirkpatrick, Elizabeth Chun, Jerry Liu, Diana Palmquist, Brian Wynhoven, Jeffrey Stott, George Yang, Sarah Barber, Robert A Holt, Asim Siddiqui, Steven J M Jones, Marco A Marra, Brian E Ellis, Carl J Douglas, Kermit Ritland, Jörg Bohlmann.
Abstract
As part of a genomics strategy to characterize inducible defences against insect herbivory in poplar, we developed a comprehensive suite of functional genomics resources including cDNA libraries, expressed sequence tags (ESTs) and a cDNA microarray platform. These resources are designed to complement the existing poplar genome sequence and poplar (Populus spp.) ESTs by focusing on herbivore- and elicitor-treated tissues and incorporating normalization methods to capture rare transcripts. From a set of 15 standard, normalized or full-length cDNA libraries, we generated 139,007 3'- or 5'-end sequenced ESTs, representing more than one-third of the c. 385,000 publicly available Populus ESTs. Clustering and assembly of 107,519 3'-end ESTs resulted in 14,451 contigs and 20,560 singletons, altogether representing 35,011 putative unique transcripts, or potentially more than three-quarters of the predicted c. 45,000 genes in the poplar genome. Using this EST resource, we developed a cDNA microarray containing 15,496 unique genes, which was utilized to monitor gene expression in poplar leaves in response to herbivory by forest tent caterpillars (Malacosoma disstria). After 24 h of feeding, 1191 genes were classified as up-regulated, compared to only 537 down-regulated. Functional classification of this induced gene set revealed genes with roles in plant defence (e.g. endochitinases, Kunitz protease inhibitors), octadecanoid and ethylene signalling (e.g. lipoxygenase, allene oxide synthase, 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylate oxidase), transport (e.g. ABC proteins, calreticulin), secondary metabolism [e.g. polyphenol oxidase, isoflavone reductase, (-)-germacrene D synthase] and transcriptional regulation [e.g. leucine-rich repeat transmembrane kinase, several transcription factor classes (zinc finger C3H type, AP2/EREBP, WRKY, bHLH)]. This study provides the first genome-scale approach to characterize insect-induced defences in a woody perennial providing a solid platform for functional investigation of plant-insect interactions in poplar.Entities:
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Year: 2006 PMID: 16626454 DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-294X.2006.02824.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Ecol ISSN: 0962-1083 Impact factor: 6.185