| Literature DB >> 20150969 |
Gopaljee Jha1, Karnika Thakur, Priyanka Thakur.
Abstract
Venturia inaequalis is the causal agent of apple scab, a devastating disease of apple. We outline several unique features of this pathogen which are useful for molecular genetics studies intended to understand plant-pathogen interactions. The pathogenicity mechanisms of the pathogen and overview of apple defense responses, monogenic and polygenic resistance, and their utilization in scab resistance breeding programs are also reviewed.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20150969 PMCID: PMC2817808 DOI: 10.1155/2009/680160
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomed Biotechnol ISSN: 1110-7243
Figure 1Symptoms of Apple Scab disease. (a) The dark colored sharply bordered, brown, and corky lesions are apparent on the infected apple fruit. (b) Scattered, olivaceous green and velvety, chlorotic sporulating lesions are observed on the infected leaf.
Factors predicted to govern pathogenicity and virulence of V. inaequalis.
| Locus/Gene | Associated functions | References |
|---|---|---|
| Avirulence factors | ||
| Avirulent on apple cultivars containing | [ | |
| Avirulent on apple cultivars containing | [ | |
| Avirulent on apple cultivars containing | [ | |
| Avirulent on apple cultivars containing | [ | |
| Avirulent on apple cultivars containing | [ | |
| Avirulent on apple cultivars containing | [ | |
| Avirulent on apple cultivars containing | [ | |
| Cell Wall Degrading enzymes (CWDEs) | Promote pathogen entry into the host and facilitates nutrients uptake | [ |
| Cellulase | ” | [ |
| ” | [ | |
| Polygalacturonase (endo-PG & Exo-PG) | ” | [ |
| Cutinase | Assists pathogen in cuticle penetration and sub-cuticular growth | [ |
| Esterase | Assists pathogen in cuticle penetration by softening cutin | [ |
| Melanoprotein | Assists in slow release of CWDEs and diverting the solute/nutrient flow towards the site of infections | [ |
| Cellophane induced | ||
| Induced during apple infections | [ | |
| Induced during apple infections | [ |
Physiological races of V. inaequalis.
| Races | Pathological characteristics on apple cultivars |
|---|---|
| Race1 | Non sporulating lesion on Dolgo, R 12740-7A (a Russian cultivar) and Geneva |
| Race 2 | Sporulating lesions on Dolgo, Geneva and some progenies of R 12740-7A |
| Race 3 | Sporulating lesions on Geneva, and non sporulating lesion on Dolgo, R 12740-7A |
| Race 4 | Non sporulating lesion on Dolgo, Geneva and sporulating lesion on those progenies of R12740-7A on which race 2 isolates cannot sporulate |
| Race 5 | Sporulating lesions on |
| Race 6 | Sporulating lesions on |
| Race 7 | Can infect cultivars having |
| Race 8 | Can infect Golden delicious, Royal gala, and cultivars containing |
References: Races 1 to 5: MacHardy, 1996 [2], races 6 and 7: Bénaouf and Parisi, 2000 [16], race 8: Bus et al., 2005 [20].
List of apple R-genes imparting scab resistance.
| S.N. | Sourcea /host | Linkage group | Resistance responseb | Molecular marker (~Distance from the gene in cM) | Reference | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Old name | New name | ||||||
| Antonovka Type PI 172623 Differential host: h10 | LG-1 | Class 1 | B398480 (16) | [ | |||
| Hansen's baccata #2 Differential host: h12 | LG-12 (Distal end) | Class 2 to 3b | Hi02d05 (7.8) Hi07f01(13.7) | [ | |||
| LG-2 (Distal end) | Class 0 to 3b | CH05e03 (0.6) T6 (3.9) | [ | ||||
| Durello di Forli Differential host: h13 | LG-10 (Proximal end) | Class 2 | OPAF07-880 (2.0) CH2b07 (9.0) | [ | |||
| 5 | 1980-015-025 | LG1 | — | CH-Vf1 (1) 67005F17 (7) | [ | ||
| J34; Differential host: h9 | — | — | [ | ||||
| — | Dülmener Rosenapfel Differential host: h14 | LG-6 (Proximal end) | Class 2 | HB09TC (5) | [ | ||
| “Priscilla” Differential host: h6 | LG-1 (Distal end) | Class 0 to 3b | M18 (0.2) CH-Vf1 (0.0) AL07 (0.9) | [ | |||
| LG-8 | Class 1 | [ | |||||
| Golden Delicious Differential host: h1 | LG-12 (Distal end) | Class 2 | MC105 (3.0) CH01D03 (0.5) | [ | |||
| LG-2 (Distal end) | Class 2 | OPL 19 433(1) Ch02b10 (8) | [ | ||||
| Q71; Differential host: h3 | — | — | [ | ||||
| LG-2 (Distal end) | Class 1 | S22 (4) CH02c02 (5) | [ | ||||
| LG-2 (Distal end) | Class 2 | OPL19 (1.3) | [ | ||||
| LG-17 (Distal end) | Class1 | OPB12 (6) | [ | ||||
| GMAL 2473 Differential host: h15 | LG-2 (Proximal end) | Class 0 to 2 | CH02c02a (0.0) | [ | |||
aThe apple cultivar from where the gene has been isolated.
bThe characteristics of resistance response imparted by these R genes on apple against scab infection. Class 0: no symptoms; Class 1: pit type hypersensitive response like reactions; Class 2: irregular edged chlorotic lesions with slight necrotic center with no sporulation; Class 3a: chlorotic and necrotic lesions with rare sporulation; Class 3b: prominent sporulations with chlorotic and necrotic lesions.
Genes shown to impart scab resistance in apple.
| Gene | Gene source | Apple cultivar (s) used in study | Inference | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chitinase | ||||
| McIntosh, | Transgenic plants are resistant to mix of Races 1-5 | [ | ||
| McIntosh | Transgenic plants are resistant to mix of Races 1-5 | [ | ||
| McIntosh | Exhibit Synergism in imparting scab resistance against mix of Races 1-5 | [ | ||
| Galaxy, Araine | Transgenic plants are resistant to Race 1 and 6 | [ | ||
| Puriondoline B ( | Wheat | Galaxy, Ariane | Transgenic plants are resistant to Race 6 | [ |
| Apple | Galaxy | Transgenic plants are resistant to mix of Races 1-5 | [ | |
| Apple | Florina, Golden Delicious | Upregulated by SA treatment and during Venturia infections | [ |