June 5, 2024

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Food security: Researchers discover gene for resistance against a disease that ravages rice and wheat crops

The microscopic fungus Magnaporthe oryzae causes blast disease in rice and other cereal crops. Necrotic lesions form on the aerial parts such as the stalks or leaves (photos on left). Disease resistance genes, such as Ptr, protect rice against blast disease by preventing the fungus from infecting it (photos on right). Credit: INRAE—Stella Cesari
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The microscopic fungus Magnaporthe oryzae causes blast disease in rice and other cereal crops. Necrotic lesions form on the aerial parts such as the stalks or leaves (photos on left). Disease resistance genes, such as Ptr, protect rice against blast disease by preventing the fungus from infecting it (photos on right). Credit: INRAE—Stella Cesari

Blast disease, caused by the fungus Magnaporthe oryzae, is a veritable plague in agriculture. In addition to devastating rice crops—the staple food of 60% of the world's population—it began attacking wheat in the 1980s, across a growing area of distribution and with a serious risk of emergence in Europe.

In this context, researchers from INRAE, CIRAD and the Université de Montpellier, together with scientists from China and the Philippines, analyzed the behind a to blast found in rice. They identified Ptr, a new type of disease resistance gene in plants. The presence of this Ptr gene makes rice immune to strains of M. oryzae that secrete AVR-Pita virulence factor, a protein that, in the absence of this gene, helps the pathogenic fungus invade the plant.

The study is published in the journal Nature Plants.

The majority of resistance genes in plants code for antenna-like receptors (proteins) that recognize chemical signals emitted by pathogens.

Ptr, however, codes for a new type of protein, not previously known to be active in plant immune systems. Scientists do not yet understand how this protein works. Unexpectedly, this research invalidates previous reference studies, published in 2000, that reported that another gene named Pi-ta and coding for a conventional type of immune receptor was responsible for AVR-Pita detection.

Rice ears in northern Vietnam. Credit: INRAE - Bertrand Nicolas
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Rice ears in northern Vietnam. Credit: INRAE - Bertrand Nicolas

This work paves the way for the study of new resistance mechanisms in plants based on Ptr and other new components, with the aim of better understanding natural resistance to disease and using it more effectively for crop protection.

More information: Gui Xiao et al, The unconventional resistance protein PTR recognizes the Magnaporthe oryzae effector AVR-Pita in an allele-specific manner, Nature Plants (2024). DOI: 10.1038/s41477-024-01694-z

Journal information: Nature Plants

Provided by INRAE - National Research Institute for Agriculture, Food and Environment

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