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Identification of new pathogenicity genes in Magnaporthe oryzae through the construction of an Agrobacterium tumefaciens-mediated insertion mutant library

Posted on:2008-04-08Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:The University of ArizonaCandidate:Betts, Melania FigueroaFull Text:PDF
GTID:1443390005456244Subject:Biology
Abstract/Summary:PDF Full Text Request
An understanding of plant pathogen-host interactions is essential to design efficient strategies to control disease in crops. Magnaporthe oryzae, an ascomyceteous fungus and causal agent of rice blast disease, is a model organism to study host-microbe interactions. The overall aim of this dissertation project was to identify genes involved in pathogenicity through the construction and characterization of a random insertional mutagenesis library. In order to saturate the genome with DNA inserts, a collection of >54,000 insertion lines of the M. oryzae strain 70-15 was generated via two transformation methods, PEG/CaCl2 (polyethylene glycol)-mediated protoplast transformation and Agrobacterium tumefaciens- mediated transformation. The first part of this dissertation describes the optimization of both transformation approaches, compares their efficiency and provides a description of the high-throughput processing and phenotypic analysis of the insertion lines. An in vitro appressorium assay of 12,000 T-DNA insertion strains allowed the identification of 135 lines that were classified as morphologically or functionally different than wild-type. Rice infection assays demonstrated that 112 of these strains exhibited defects in pathogenicity.; The second part of this dissertation project analyzed the T-DNA integration patterns in a subset of pathogenicity mutants. This section aimed to identify the disrupted genes via recovery of M. oryzae sequences adjacent to the sites of T-DNA insertion. Genomic mapping of 61 T-DNA insertions in pathogenicity mutants via rescuing M. oryzae chromosomal T-DNA flanking sequences using inverse PCR resulted in the identification of 22 conserved hypothetical genes with predicted function, 11 predicted open reading frames without a GenBank significant match, two unannotated regions of the genome assembly and seven intergenic regions. The final part of this dissertation describes the characterization of a M. oryzae pathogenicity mutant that contains a T-DNA insertion in the upstream region of two divergently transcribed genes that encode the vacuolar type-ATPase subunit c'' and the general transcription factor TFIIA subunit gamma. Genetic complementation demonstrated the insertion of the T-DNA in the promoter region of the general transcription factor TFIIA subunit gamma is responsible for observed defects in conidiation, appressorium morphogenesis, and appressorium function. This is the first report relating the function of TFIIA subunit gamma to pathogenicity.
Keywords/Search Tags:TFIIA subunit gamma, Pathogenicity, Oryzae, Genes, Insertion, T-DNA, Identification
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