Abstract

Rice blast is a major destructive fungal disease that poses a serious threat to rice production and the improvement of blast resistance is critical to rice breeding. The antimicrobial peptide MSI-99 has been suggested as an antimicrobial peptide conferring resistance to bacterial and fungal diseases. Here, a vector harboring the MSI-99 gene was constructed and introduced into the tobacco chloroplast genome via particle bombardment. Transformed plants were obtained and verified to be homoplastomic by PCR and Southern hybridization. In planta assays demonstrated that the transgenic tobacco plants displayed an enhanced resistance to the fungal disease. The evaluation of the antimicrobial activity revealed that the crude protein extracts from the transgenic plants manifested an antimicrobial activity against E. coli, even after incubation at 120 °C for 20 min, indicating significant heat stability of MSI-99. More importantly, the MSI-99-containing protein extracts were firstly proved in vitro and in vivo to display significant suppressive effects on two rice blast isolates. These findings provide a strong basis for the development of new biopesticides to combat rice blast.

Highlights

  • Rice blast is one of the three major fungal diseases causing economic losses in rice production of approximately US $60 million every year [1]

  • The Prrn promoter and Trps16 terminator were the regulatory elements from the tobacco chloroplast genome

  • The vector was introduced into tobacco chloroplasts using particle bombardment

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Summary

Introduction

Rice blast is one of the three major fungal diseases causing economic losses in rice production of approximately US $60 million every year [1]. A rice cultivar resistant to the predominant race of pathogens could lose resistance just a few years after its release [2]. It has been reported that transgenic rice expressing chitinase [3], chitosan [4], and resistance genes [5] can improve resistance against rice blast, but there is no disease-resistant transgenic rice cultivar in commercial production. Phytodrugs such as tricyclazole are commonly used to fight rice blast

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