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Article|26 Aug 2015|OPEN
Comparative transcriptomics of Central Asian Vitis vinifera accessions reveals distinct defense strategies against powdery mildew
Katherine C H Amrine1 , Barbara Blanco-Ulate1 , Summaira Riaz1 , Dániel Pap1,2 , Laura Jones1 , Rosa Figueroa-Balderas1 and M Andrew Walker1 , Dario Cantu,1 ,
1Department of Viticulture and Enology, University of California, Davis, Davis, CA 95616, USA
2Department of Genetics and Plant Breeding, Corvinus University of Budapest, Villányi út 29-34, 1118 Budapest, Hungary
*Corresponding author. E-mail: dacantu@ucdavis.edu

Horticulture Research 2,
Article number: 37 (2015)
doi: https://doi.org/10.1038/hortres.2015.37
Views: 925

Received: 15 May 2015
Revised: 17 Jul 2015
Accepted: 20 Jul 2015
Published online: 26 Aug 2015

Abstract

Grape powdery mildew (PM), caused by the biotrophic ascomycete Erysiphe necator, is a devastating fungal disease that affects most Vitis vinifera cultivars. We have previously identified a panel of V. vinifera accessions from Central Asia with partial resistance to PM that possess a Ren1-like local haplotype. In this study, we show that in addition to the typical Ren1-associated late post-penetration resistance, these accessions display a range of different levels of disease development suggesting that alternative alleles or additional genes contribute to determining the outcome of the interaction with the pathogen. To identify potential Ren1-dependent transcriptional responses and functions associated with the different levels of resistance, we sequenced and analyzed the transcriptomes of these Central Asian accessions at two time points of PM infection. Transcriptomes were compared to identify constitutive differences and PM-inducible responses that may underlie their disease resistant phenotype. Responses to E. necator in all resistant accessions were characterized by an early up-regulation of 13 genes, most encoding putative defense functions, and a late down-regulation of 32 genes, enriched in transcriptional regulators and protein kinases. Potential Ren1-dependent responses included a hotspot of co-regulated genes on chromosome 18. We also identified 81 genes whose expression levels and dynamics correlated with the phenotypic differences between the most resistant accessions ‘Karadzhandahal’, DVIT3351.27, and O34-16 and the other genotypes. This study provides a first exploration of the functions associated with varying levels of partial resistance to PM in V. vinifera accessions that can be exploited as sources of genetic resistance in grape breeding programs.