Natural mutation in Stay-Green (OsSGR) confers enhanced resistance to rice sheath blight through elevating cytokinin content.

Plant Biotechnol J

Jiangsu Key Laboratory of Crop Genomics and Molecular Breeding/Zhongshan Biological Breeding Laboratory/Key Laboratory of Plant Functional Genomics of the Ministry of Education, Agricultural College of Yangzhou University, Yangzhou, China.

Published: December 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Sheath blight (ShB), caused by the fungus Rhizoctonia solani, is a serious problem for crops globally, and current rice varieties lack major resistance genes.
  • Researchers identified a rice mutant, sbr1, which shows improved resistance to ShB while retaining normal growth traits, though it has an undesirable stay-green characteristic linked to the disruption of the Stay-Green (OsSGR) gene.
  • The study found that manipulating cytokinin levels through the knockout of the OsCKX7 gene boosts ShB resistance without negatively affecting yield or causing the stay-green issue, offering new possibilities for developing resistant rice varieties.

Article Abstract

Sheath blight (ShB), caused by Rhizoctonia solani, is a highly destructive disease in many crops worldwide and no major resistance genes are available. Here, we identified a sbr1 (sheath blight resistance 1) rice mutant, which shows enhanced ShB resistance and maintains wildtype agronomic traits including yield, but carries an undesired stay-green phenotype. Through map-based cloning and transgenic validation, we found that an insertion disrupting the Stay-Green (OsSGR) gene is responsible for sbr1 phenotypes. Mechanistically, the sbr1/Ossgr mutants reduce the expression of most OsCKX genes, which function in cytokinin (CK) degradation, to accumulate CK leading to ShB resistance. Importantly, knockout of OsCKX7, predominantly expressed in the leaf sheath and highly induced by R. solani, significantly enhances ShB resistance without stay-green phenotype nor yield penalty, showing high application potential. Thus, our study reveals novel insights that OsSGR and cytokinin play key roles in rice-R. solani interaction and generates a valuable ShB-resistant germplasm.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/pbi.14540DOI Listing

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