Differential induction of defense genes in hexaploid wheat roots by the plant-parasitic nematodes Pratylenchus neglectus and P. thornei
Patricia A. Okubara, Richard M. Sharpe, Amy B. Peetz, Xianran Li, Inga A. Zasada

TL;DR
This study compares how two nematode species affect defense gene expression in wheat roots and finds that their combination triggers the strongest response.
Contribution
The study identifies nematode-inducible promoters for potential use in breeding programs to enhance wheat resistance.
Findings
P. thornei induced defense genes more strongly than P. neglectus.
The combination of both nematode species induced the highest number of defense genes.
Nematode-inducible promoters responsive to both species were identified.
Abstract
Pratylenchus neglectus and P. thornei are among the most destructive root lesion nematodes of wheat in the Pacific Northwest, United States of America and throughout the world. The aim of this study was to determine whether both nematode species were similar in their ability to induce defense genes in roots of wheat genotype Scarlet, and whether a combination of both species induced a different pattern of gene induction than each species alone. The long-term aspect of the research was to identify nematode-inducible promoters for deploying defense genes in roots in breeding programs. The root transcriptomes of genotype Scarlet were obtained after a one-week infection period with each nematode species separately, or both species combined. Root defense gene expression was induced for all three treatments relative to the no-nematode control, but P. thornei affected expression to a greater…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNematode management and characterization studies · Legume Nitrogen Fixing Symbiosis · Plant Parasitism and Resistance
