Recessive Resistance in Pisum sativum and Potyvirus Pathotype Resolved in a Gene-for-Cistron Correspondence between Host and Virus
Open Access
- 15 July 2001
- journal article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Journal of Virology
- Vol. 75 (14) , 6609-6614
- https://doi.org/10.1128/jvi.75.14.6609-6614.2001
Abstract
Pea seed-borne mosaic potyvirus (PSbMV) isolates are divided into pathotypes P-1, P-2, and P-4 according to their infection profile on a panel of Pisum sativum lines. P. sativumPI 269818 is resistant to P-1 and P-2 isolates and is susceptible to P-4 isolates. Resistance to P-1 is inherited as a single recessive gene, denoted sbm-1, and the pathogenicity determinant has previously been mapped to the virus-coded protein VPg. In the cultivar Bonneville, a second recessive gene, sbm-2,confers specific resistance to P-2. By exchanging cistrons between a P-2 and a P-4 isolate, the P3-6k1 cistron was identified as the PSbMV host-specific pathogenicity determinant on Bonneville. Exchange of P3-6k1 did not affect infection on PI 269818, and infection of Bonneville was not altered by substitution of the VPg cistron, indicating that P3-6k1 and VPg are independent determinants of pathotype-specific infectivity. On PI 269818 the pathogenicity determinant of both P-1 and P-2 mapped to the N terminus of VPg. This suggests that VPg from the P-1 and P-2 isolates are functionally similar on this host and that resistance to P-1 and P-2 in PI 269818 may operate by the same mechanism. Identification of VPg–sbm-1 and P3-6k1–sbm-2 as independent pairs of genetic interactors between PSbMV and P. sativum provides a simple explanation of the three known pathotypes of PSbMV. Furthermore, analysis of β-glucuronidase-tagged P-2 virus indicated that sbm-2 resistance affected an early step in infection, implying that the P3-6k1 region plays a critical role in potyvirus replication or cell-to-cell movement.Keywords
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