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Mutations Found in the Asc1 Gene that Confer Susceptibility to the AAL-toxin in Ancestral Tomatoes from Peru and Mexico

Authors :
Rin Tsuzuki
Ken Komatsu
Dina Lida Gutiérrez Reynoso
Raúl Blas Sevillano
Carlos A. Amasifuen Guerra
Ines Carolina Torres Arias
Fatima Cáceres de Baldarrago
Milca Gianira Elespuru Suna
Medali Heidi Huarhua Zaquinaula
Rosa María Cabrera Pintado
Joel Flores Ticona
Enrique Rodoríguez Pérez
Hiroki Saito
Takuo Hozum
Juan Carlos Guerrero Abad
Motoichiro Kodama
Shunsuke Kotera
Cledy Ureta Sierra
Jorge Andrés Biondi Thorndike
Olenka Ines Alberca Cruz
Tsutomu Arie
Yasunori Akagi
Liliana Maria Aragón Caballero
Source :
Plants, Volume 10, Issue 1, Instituto Nacional de Innovación Agraria, INIA-Institucional, instacron:INIA, Repositorio Institucional-INIA, Plants, Vol 10, Iss 47, p 47 (2021)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute, 2020.

Abstract

Tomato susceptibility/resistance to stem canker disease caused by Alternaria alternata f. sp. lycopersici and its pathogenic factor AAL-toxin is determined by the presence of the Asc1 gene. Several cultivars of commercial tomato (Solanum lycopersicum var. lycopersicum, SLL) are reported to have a mutation in Asc1, resulting in their susceptibility to AAL-toxin. We evaluated 119 ancestral tomato accessions including S. pimpinellifolium (SP), S. lycopersicum var. cerasiforme (SLC) and S. lycopersicum var. lycopersicum &ldquo<br />jitomate criollo&rdquo<br />(SLJ) for AAL-toxin susceptibility. Three accessions, SP PER018805, SLC PER018894, and SLJ M5-3, were susceptible to AAL-toxin. SLC PER018894 and SLJ M5-3 had a two-nucleotide deletion (nt 854_855del) in Asc1 identical to that found in SLL cv. Aichi-first. Another mutation (nt 931_932insT) that may confer AAL-toxin susceptibility was identified in SP PER018805. In the phylogenetic tree based on the 18 COSII sequences, a clade (S3) is composed of SP, including the AAL-toxin susceptible PER018805, and SLC. AAL-toxin susceptible SLC PER018894 and SLJ M5-3 were in Clade S2 with SLL cultivars. As SLC is thought to be the ancestor of SLL, and SLJ is an intermediate tomato between SLC and SLL, Asc1s with / without the mutation seem to have been inherited throughout the history of tomato domestication and breeding.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
22237747
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Plants
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4bed80558b2511d3d3c632e382b5384c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/plants10010047