Receptor-like leucine-rich repeat kinases of subfamily III are involved in the recognition of Pectobacterium spp. by Solanaceae plants
E.V. Shrub, N.V. Kalubaka, P.V. Vychyk, O.A. Badalyan, Y.A. Nikolaichik

TL;DR
This study identifies plant receptors in Solanaceae species that recognize a bacterial pathogen, offering insights for developing disease-resistant crops.
Contribution
The study functionally characterizes LRR-RLKIII receptors in Solanaceae plants for recognition of Pectobacterium spp., identifying potential resistance genes.
Findings
Nine clusters of LRR-RLKIII receptors were identified in Solanaceae plants.
Four Solanaceae RLKs were found to interact with the DspE effector from Pectobacterium versatile.
Virus-induced silencing confirmed the role of these RLKs in pathogen recognition.
Abstract
The genomes of Solanaceae plants contain over 600 receptor-like protein kinase genes with leucine-rich repeats (LRR-RLK), many likely associated with pathogen detection, but very few functionally characterized. Pectobacterium spp. are the major bacterial pathogens of agricultural crops, particularly potatoes and other Solanaceae plants. For relevant potato pathogens from the genus Pectobacterium, specific immune receptors have not been described in Solanaceae. However, in Malus × domestica, four LRR-RLK from the LRRIII subfamily (DIPM1-4) have been characterized as receptors for the related pathogen Erwinia amylovora. DIPMs specifically interact with the effector protein DspE and are involved in E. amylovora recognition. Since the DspE ortholog is also the main effector in Pectobacterium spp., we performed a phylogenetic analysis of LRRIII subfamily receptors in the most relevant…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPlant-Microbe Interactions and Immunity · Plant Pathogenic Bacteria Studies · Plant Pathogens and Fungal Diseases
