| Literature DB >> 29058103 |
Elenor Castillo1, Federico Martinelli2, Florence Zakharov-Negre1, Susan E Ebeler3, Tom R Buzo4, Michael V McKenry4, Abhaya M Dandekar5.
Abstract
KEY MESSAGE: Carrizo transgenic plants overexpressing methionine-gamma-lyase produced dimethyl sulfide. The transgenic plants displayed more resistance to nematode attacks (Tylenculus semipenetrans) and may represent an innovative strategy for nematode control. Tylenchulus semipenetrans is a nematode pest of many citrus varieties that causes extensive damage to commercial crops worldwide. Carrizo citrange vr. (Citrus sinensis L. Usb × Poncirus trifoliate L. Raf) plants overexpressing Brevibacterium linens methionine-gamma-lyase (BlMGL) produced the sulfur volatile compound dimethyl sulfide (DMS). The aim of this work was to determine if transgenic citrus plants expressing BlMGL showed increased tolerance to T. semipenetrans infestation and to determine the effect on the content of key amino acids. While transgenic lines emitted dimethyl sulfide from leaves and roots, no sulfur-containing volatiles were detectable in wild-type Carrizo in the same tissues. Significant changes detected some key amino acids from leaves of transgenic plants such as aspartate, lysine, glycine, leucine and threonine with no changes in the amounts of methionine and α-ketobutyrate. In roots only glycine showed significant changes across all transgenic lines in comparison to wild-type plants. Transgenic plants expressing BlMGL and emitting DMS had less T. semipenetrans aggregation and more biomass than infected WT control plants, indicating that they may represent an innovative management alternative to pesticide/nematicide-based remedies.Entities:
Keywords: Brevibacterium; Methionine gamma lyase; Nematodes; Sulfur volatiles
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29058103 PMCID: PMC5688205 DOI: 10.1007/s11103-017-0666-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plant Mol Biol ISSN: 0167-4412 Impact factor: 4.076
Fig. 1Relative BlMGL gene expression in Carrizo a leaf and b root tissue. Vertical bars represent expression relative to a non-transgenic WT control with a value of 1 (n = 3)
Fig. 2Effect of BlMGL expression on dimethyl sulfide production in Carrizo a leaf and b root tissue. n.d not detected; n = 3
Amino and keto acid analysis of leaf tissue from WT and BlMGL-expressing Carrizo lines
| WT | MGL-1 | MGL-2 | MGL-6 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aspartic acid | 19,883 ± 343 | 17,517 ± 2419 | 18,169 ± 3644 | 31,332 ± 2412* |
| Lysine | 835 ± 18 | 630 ± 36* | 919 ± 37 | 2784 ± 405* |
| Glycine | 31,433 ± 5569 | 6080 ± 810* | 5083 ± 1697* | 29,058 ± 2647 |
| Leucine | 861 ± 61 | 757 ± 35 | 1232 ± 94* | 12,808 ± 57* |
| Threonine | 3668 ± 264 | 2740 ± 216 | 2087 ± 62* | 6375 ± 451* |
| Isoleucine | 5292 ± 2960 | 8251 ± 1180 | 3110 ± 1880 | 8328 ± 926 |
| Methionine | 131 ± 17 | 107 ± 23 | 135 ± 10 | 139 ± 37 |
| Cysteine–glycine | 220 ± 15 | 399 ± 187 | 314 ± 71 | 578 ± 165 |
| α-Ketobutyrate | 1.2 ± 0.3 | 2.0 ± 0.4 | 1.5 ± 0.1 | 1.9 ± 0.4 |
The concentrations of metabolites that differed significantly from the WT are denoted by an asterisk (n = 3, p < 0.05, two-tailed Student t test)
Amino and keto acid analysis of root tissue from WT and BlMGL-expressing Carrizo lines
| Compound average | WT | MGL-2 | MGL-4 | MGL-6 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aspartic acid | 62,678 ± 4544 | 98,051 ± 13,431 | 105,960 ± 1901* | 61,644 ± 4991 |
| Lysine | 11,953 ± 406 | 8719 ± 1413 | 10,698 ± 1264 | 6707 ± 275* |
| Glycine | 5176 ± 524 | 10,580 ± 1434* | 10,978 ± 941* | 7450 ± 299* |
| Leucine | 8633 ± 363 | 2798 ± 352* | 8714 ± 573 | 3563 ± 157* |
| Threonine | 7847 ± 592 | 3369 ± 463* | 6847 ± 126 | 4407 ± 274* |
| Isoleucine | 7659 ± 1287 | 7861 ± 1309 | 6466 ± 3427 | 3040 ± 1354 |
| Methionine | 550 ± 16 | 356 ± 72 | 695 ± 42 | 273 ± 14* |
| Cysteine–glycine | 1112 ± 5 | 1224 ± 36 | 786 ± 48* | 999 ± 7* |
| α-Ketobutyrate (ppm) | 1.51 ± 0.24 | 2.12 ± 0.23 | 2.53 ± 0.43 | 2.04 ± 0.33 |
The concentrations of metabolites that differed significantly from the WT are denoted by an asterisk (n = 3, p < 0.05, two-tailed Student t test)
Fig. 3Effect of BlMGL introduction on the infection rate of Carrizo roots by T. semipenetrans. Bars represent the average (n = 3) nematode count per gram root tissue at 120 days (grey bars) and 240 days (black bars) after inoculation. Statistically significant (p < 0.05) differences between WT and BlMGL-expressing lines were evaluated at 120 day and at 240 day by Tukey’s test. Different letters means significant difference between the four plant types at each of the two time points after inoculation
Fig. 4Root system biomass. At 120 days after inoculation (grey bars), statistically significant (p < 0.05) differences ranged from 18 to 22 g per plant for transgenic lines compared to 10 g per plant for WT control. At 240 days (black bars), statistically significant differences ranged from 25 to 29 g per plant compared to 14 g per plant for WT. Bars represent the average (n = 3). A letter indicates statistical differences evaluated by Tukey’s test
Fig. 5Total biomass fresh weight. Bars represent averages (n = 3) at 120 days (grey bars) and 240 days (black bars) after inoculation. Different letter indicate statistically significant differences (p < 0.05) as evaluated by Tukey’s test; n = 3