Abstract

BackgroundTranslation initiation factors of the 4E and 4G protein families mediate resistance to several RNA plant viruses in the natural diversity of crops. Particularly, a single point mutation in melon eukaryotic translation initiation factor 4E (eIF4E) controls resistance to Melon necrotic spot virus (MNSV) in melon. Identification of allelic variants within natural populations by EcoTILLING has become a rapid genotype discovery method.ResultsA collection of Cucumis spp. was characterised for susceptibility to MNSV and Cucumber vein yellowing virus (CVYV) and used for the implementation of EcoTILLING to identify new allelic variants of eIF4E. A high conservation of eIF4E exonic regions was found, with six polymorphic sites identified out of EcoTILLING 113 accessions. Sequencing of regions surrounding polymorphisms revealed that all of them corresponded to silent nucleotide changes and just one to a non-silent change correlating with MNSV resistance. Except for the MNSV case, no correlation was found between variation of eIF4E and virus resistance, suggesting the implication of different and/or additional genes in previously identified resistance phenotypes. We have also characterized a new allele of eIF4E from Cucumis zeyheri, a wild relative of melon. Functional analyses suggested that this new eIF4E allele might be responsible for resistance to MNSV.ConclusionThis study shows the applicability of EcoTILLING in Cucumis spp., but given the conservation of eIF4E, new candidate genes should probably be considered to identify new sources of resistance to plant viruses. Part of the methodology described here could alternatively be used in TILLING experiments that serve to generate new eIF4E alleles.

Highlights

  • Translation initiation factors of the 4E and 4G protein families mediate resistance to several RNA plant viruses in the natural diversity of crops

  • C. melo accessions C-178 and C-512, C. dipsaceus C-590, C. meeusii C-635 and C. anguria C-636 were resistant to Melon necrotic spot virus (MNSV)-Mα5, but susceptible to MNSV-264

  • We demonstrated previously that nsv codes for an allele carrying a single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) in exon 5 of eIF4E, and that this SNP is responsible for resistance to MNSV [18]

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Summary

Introduction

Translation initiation factors of the 4E and 4G protein families mediate resistance to several RNA plant viruses in the natural diversity of crops. Throughout the last decade several susceptibility factors to plant viruses have been identified and characterized using model organisms as experimental systems [4,5,6] Among these factors, only translation initiation factors of the 4E family (eIF4E and eIF [iso]4E) and eIF4 [iso]4G have been found to mediate resistance in the natural diversity of crops [6,7]. Mutagenesis of model hosts [12,13] and the characterization of some natural recessive resistance genes [14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22] have implicated eIF4E as a susceptibility factor required for plant virus multiplication

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