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Article|02 Apr 2024|OPEN
Adaptive regulation of miRNAs/milRNAs in tissue-specific interaction between apple and Valsa mali
Chengyu Gao1 , Binsen Zhao1 , Jian Zhang1 , Xuan Du1 , Jie Wang1 , Yan Guo1 , Yanting He1 , Hao Feng1 , and Lili Huang,1 ,
1State Key Laboratory for Crop Stress Resistance and High-Efficiency Production, College of Plant Protection, Northwest A&F University, Yangling, Shaanxi 712100, China
*Corresponding author. E-mail: xiaosong04005@163.com,huanglili@nwsuaf.edu.cn

Horticulture Research 11,
Article number: uhae094 (2024)
doi: https://doi.org/10.1093/hr/uhae094
Views: 1329

Received: 01 Aug 2023
Accepted: 25 Mar 2024
Published online: 02 Apr 2024

Abstract

In plant-pathogen interactions, pathogens display tissue specificity, infecting and causing disease in particular tissues. However, the involvement of microRNAs/microRNA-like RNAs (miRNAs/milRNAs) in tissue-specific regulation during plant-pathogen interactions remains largely unexplored. This study investigates the differential expression of miRNAs/milRNAs, as well as their corresponding target genes, in interactions between Valsa mali (Vm) and different apple tissues. The results demonstrated that both apple miRNAs and Vm milRNAs exhibited distinct expression profiles when Vm infected bark and leaves, with functionally diverse corresponding target genes. Furthermore, one apple miRNA (Mdo-miR482a) and one Vm milRNA (Vm-milR57) were identified as exhibiting tissue-specific expression in interactions between Vm and apple bark or leaves. Mdo-miR482a was exclusively up-regulated in response to Vm infection in bark and target a nucleotide-binding leucine-rich repeat (NLR) gene of apple. When Mdo-miR482a was transiently over-expressed or silenced, the resistance was significantly reduced or improved. Similarly, transient expression of the NLR gene also showed an increase in resistance. Vm-milR57 could target two essential pathogenicity-related genes of Vm. During Vm infection in bark, the expression of Vm-milR57 was down-regulated to enhance the expression of the corresponding target gene to improve the pathogenicity. The study is the first to reveal tissue-specific characteristics of apple miRNAs and Vm milRNAs in interactions between Vm and different apple tissues, providing new insights into adaptive regulation in tissue-specific interactions between plants and fungi.