Journal article
An avirulence gene, AvrLmJ1, from the blackleg fungus, Leptosphaeria maculans, confers avirulence to Brassica juncea cultivars
AP Van de Wouw, RGT Lowe, CE Elliott, DJ Dubois, BJ Howlett
Molecular Plant Pathology | Published : 2014
DOI: 10.1111/mpp.12105
Open access
Abstract
Summary: The fungus Leptosphaeria maculans causes blackleg of Brassica species. Here, we report the mapping and subsequent cloning of an avirulence gene from L.maculans. This gene, termed AvrLmJ1, confers avirulence towards all three Brassica juncea cultivars tested. Analysis of RNA-seq data showed that AvrLmJ1 is housed in a region of the L.maculans genome which contains only one gene that is highly expressed inplanta. The closest genes are 57 and 33kb away and, like other avirulence genes of L.maculans, AvrLmJ1 is located within an AT-rich, gene-poor region of the genome. The encoded protein is 141 amino acids, has a predicted signal peptide and is cysteine rich. Two virulent isolates cont..
View full abstractGrants
Awarded by Victoria Life Sciences Computation Initiative
Funding Acknowledgements
We thank the Grains Research and Development Corporation for funding, the Victoria Life Sciences Computation Initiative for computational resources via grant #RAS 990, the University of Melbourne for an Early Career Researcher award for R.G.T.L., and Dan Cross of Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada for seed of B. juncea cv. Forge.