Abstract

Benzoxazinoids represent preformed protective and allelopathic compounds. The main benzoxazinoid in maize (Zea mays L.) is 2,4-dihydroxy-7-methoxy-1,4-benzoxazin-3-one (DIMBOA). DIMBOA confers resistance to herbivores and microbes. Protective concentrations are found predominantly in young plantlets. We made use of the genetic diversity present in the maize nested association mapping (NAM) panel to identify lines with significant benzoxazinoid concentrations at later developmental stages. At 24 d after imbibition (dai), only three lines, including Mo17, showed effective DIMBOA concentrations of 1.5mM or more; B73, by contrast, had low a DIMBOA content. Mapping studies based on Mo17 and B73 were performed to reveal mechanisms that influence the DIMBOA level in 24 dai plants. A major quantitative trait locus mapped to the Bx gene cluster located on the short arm of chromosome 4, which encodes the DIMBOA biosynthetic genes. Mo17 was distinguished from all other NAM lines by high transcriptional expression of the Bx1 gene at later developmental stages. Bx1 encodes the signature enzyme of the pathway. In Mo17×B73 hybrids at 24 dai, only the Mo17 Bx1 allele transcript was detected. A 3.9kb cis-element, termed DICE (distal cis-element), that is located in the Bx gene cluster approximately 140 kb upstream of Bx1, was required for high Bx1 transcript levels during later developmental stages in Mo17. The DICE region was a hotspot of meiotic recombination. Genetic analysis revealed that high 24 dai DIMBOA concentrations were not strictly dependent on high Bx1 transcript levels. However, constitutive expression of Bx1 in transgenics increased DIMBOA levels at 24 dai, corroborating a correlation between DIMBOA content and Bx1 transcription.

Highlights

  • Benzoxazinoids, or cyclic hydroxamic acids, have a long record as defence chemicals in poaceous plants

  • B73 belongs to the majority of lines with low DIMBOA level at 24 dai and the IBM302 mapping population offers a solid basis for Quantitative trait locus (QTL) mapping

  • The major QTL for DIMBOA content in 24 dai plants mapped to the cluster of Bx genes (QTL4-1; Supplementary Fig. S4)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Benzoxazinoids, or cyclic hydroxamic acids, have a long record as defence chemicals in poaceous plants. DIMBOA represents a constitutive defence chemical that is produced without external challenge in the young plant, with concentrations of up to 30 mM in the seedling. The constitutive concentration in the plant decreases with age, and high concentrations of DIMBOA (1.5 mM, equal to about 1 mg g–1 of fresh weight; Long et al, 1975, 1977; Campos et al, 1989) are required for biological control. It would be beneficial for plant protection to extend significant DIMBOA levels to later developmental stages of the plant

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call