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Molecular Biology and Evolution 2020-Sep

A truncated singleton NLR causes hybrid necrosis in Arabidopsis thaliana

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A Barragan
Maximilian Collenberg
Jinge Wang
Rachelle Lee
Wei Cher
Fernando Rabanal
Haim Ashkenazy
Detlef Weigel
Eunyoung Chae

Keywords

Abstract

Hybrid necrosis in plants arises from conflict between divergent alleles of immunity genes contributed by different parents, resulting in autoimmunity. We investigate a severe hybrid necrosis case in Arabidopsis thaliana, where the hybrid does not develop past the cotyledon stage and dies three weeks after sowing. Massive transcriptional changes take place in the hybrid, including the upregulation of most NLR disease resistance genes. This is due to an incompatible interaction between the singleton TIR-NLR gene DANGEROUS MIX 10 (DM10), which was recently relocated from a larger NLR cluster, and an unlinked locus, DANGEROUS MIX 11 (DM11). There are multiple DM10 allelic variants in the global A. thaliana population, several of which have premature stop codons. One of these, which has a truncated LRR-PL region, corresponds to the DM10 risk allele. The DM10 locus and the adjacent genomic region in the risk allele carriers are highly differentiated from those in the non-risk carriers in the global A. thaliana population, suggesting that this allele became geographically widespread only relatively recently. The DM11 risk allele is much rarer and found only in two accessions from southwestern Spain - a region from which the DM10 risk haplotype is absent - indicating that the ranges of DM10 and DM11 risk alleles may be non-overlapping.

Keywords: DM10; Hybrid incompatibility; LRR-PL region; autoimmunity; interchromosomal relocation; singleton NLR.

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