Meixia Wang, Shaofang Li, Huayang Li et al .Genome editing of a dominant resistance gene for broad-spectrum resistance to bacterial diseases in rice without growth penalty.https://doi.org/10.1111/pbi.14233
Bacterial blight (BB) and bacterial leaf streak (BLS), caused by Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzae ( Xoo ) and Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzicola ( Xoc ), respectively, are the two most devastating bacterial diseases of rice worldwide. Both bacterial pathogens infect rice plants relying on type III secreted transcriptional activation-like effectors (TALEs) that bind to specific effector binding elements (EBEs) in the promoter of susceptibility ( S ) genes, and activate its expressions for disease development (Chen et al ., 2010). To counteract BB, rice has evolved a unique type of executor resistance ( R ) genes ( Xa7 , Xa10 , Xa23 , etc .), which can specifically trap certain Xoo TALEs via EBEs within their promoters and trigger strong hypersensitive response (HR). Previously, we verified that gene correction of xa23 with EBEAvrXa23 restored its function in triggering defence responses against Xoo invasion (Wei et al ., 2021). Considering Xa23 -mediated resistance to BB has been overcome by new Xoo isolates in the field in recent years, and no natural R genes against Xoc have been identified in rice; here, we investigated whether an EBE-stacking-in-the-promoter strategy could be employed in the molecular rice breeding for durable and broad-spectrum resistance to both BB and BLS by genome-editing technology.
Sequencing analysis of the xa23 locus in the commercial rice cultivar Nangeng 46 (N46) revealed that it shared an identical coding region with Xa23 in CBB23, whereas it lacked the complete EBEAvrXa23 sequence in the promoter (Figure 1a). We presumed that introducing multiple EBEs, which were responsive to TALEs from various Xoo and Xoc strains, into the xa23 N46 locus by genome editing would render host broad-spectrum and durable resistance to both pathogens. Thus, 10 EBEs (Table S1) responding to PthXo1, PthXo3, AvrXa23, Tal9aBLS256, etc . were selected and constructed into a 220-bp EBE Xoc / Xoo array (Figure 1a; Figure S1). It was synthesized, PCR amplified using a pair of chemically modified primers and used as the DNA donor (Figure S1) for targeted DNA insertion in the xa23 N46 promoter through CRISPR/Cas9-induced non-homologous end joining (NHEJ) repair pathway as described previously (Lu et al ., 2020).
Plant Biotechnology Journal,IF=13
https://doi.org/10.1111/pbi.14233