eCALIBRATOR : a comparative tool to identify key genes and pathways for Eucalyptus defense against biotic stressors
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Date
Authors
Du Toit, Yves
Coles, Donovin William
Mewalal, Ritesh
Christie, Nanette
Naidoo, Sanushka
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Frontiers Media
Abstract
Many pests and pathogens threaten Eucalyptus plantations. The study of defense
responses in this economically important wood and fiber crop enables the discovery
of novel pathways and genes, which may be adopted to improve resistance. Various
functional genomics experiments have been conducted in Eucalyptus-biotic stress
interactions following the availability of the Eucalyptus grandis genome, however,
comparisons between these studies were limited largely due to a lack of comparative
tools. To this end, we developed eCALIBRATOR http://ecalibrator.bi.up.ac.za, a tool for
the comparison of Eucalyptus biotic stress interaction. The tool, which is not limited
to Eucalyptus, allows the comparison of various datasets, provides a visual output in
the form of Venn diagrams and clustering and extraction of lists for gene ontology
enrichment analyses. We also demonstrate the usefulness of the tool in revealing
pathways and key gene targets to further functionally characterize. We identified 708
differentially expressed E. grandis genes in common among responses to the insect
pest Leptocybe invasa, oomycete pathogen Phytophthora cinnamomi and fungus
Chrysoporthe austroafricana. Within this set of genes, one of the Gene Ontology terms
enriched was “response to organonitrogen compound,” with NITRATE TRANSPORTER
2.5 (NRT2.5) being a key gene, up-regulated under susceptible interactions and downregulated
under resistant interactions. Although previous functional genetics studies in
Arabidopsis thaliana support a role in nitrate acquisition and remobilization under longterm
nitrate starvation, the importance of NRT2.5 in plant defense is unclear. The T-DNA mutants of AtNRT2.5 were more resistant to Pseudomonas syringae pv. tomato pv
tomato DC3000 inoculation than the wild-type counterpart, supporting a direct role
for NRT2.5 in plant defense. Future studies will focus on characterizing the Eucalyptus
ortholog of NRT2.5.
Description
Supplementary Material: Figure S1 : Selection of atnrt2.5 T-DNA mutants. (A) Diagram of the AtNRT2.5
gene consisting of three exons and two introns with the positions of the T-DNA
insertions in GK213H10 (AtNRT2.5-A) and GK046H04 (AtNRT2.5-B) in the
second and first exons, respectively. (B,C) PCR detection of T-DNA in
AtNRT2.5-A (B) and AtNRT2.5-B (C), respectively, using a combination of the
T-DNA left border oligonucleotide and gene-specific oligonucleotides. No
amplification was observed in AtNRT2.5-A and AtNRT2.5-B using gene-specific
oligonucleotides spanning the T-DNA insertion sites.
Table S1 : Summary of the mapping of RNA-seq libraries per Eucalyptus–pathogen interaction sample.
Table S2 : Functionally enriched terms of the gene ontology biological processes category in common between the resistant and susceptible defense responses.
Table S3 : Functionally enriched terms of the gene ontology biological processes category in the unique set of differentially expressed genes between the resistant and susceptible interactions.
Table S1 : Summary of the mapping of RNA-seq libraries per Eucalyptus–pathogen interaction sample.
Table S2 : Functionally enriched terms of the gene ontology biological processes category in common between the resistant and susceptible defense responses.
Table S3 : Functionally enriched terms of the gene ontology biological processes category in the unique set of differentially expressed genes between the resistant and susceptible interactions.
Keywords
Eucalyptus, Comparative transcriptomics, Nitrogen, Nitrate transporter, Defense
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Du Toit Y, Coles DW, Mewalal R,
Christie N and Naidoo S (2020)
eCALIBRATOR: A Comparative Tool
to Identify Key Genes and Pathways
for Eucalyptus Defense Against Biotic
Stressors. Frontiers in Microbiology 11:216.
DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2020.00216.