Rice WRKY45 Plays a Crucial Role in Benzothiadiazole-Inducible Blast Resistance

Masaki Shimono(Institute of Agrobiological Sciences), Shoji Sugano(Institute of Agrobiological Sciences), Akira Nakayama(Institute of Agrobiological Sciences), Chang‐Jie Jiang(Institute of Agrobiological Sciences), Kazuko Ono(Institute of Agrobiological Sciences), Seiichi Toki(Institute of Agrobiological Sciences), Hiroshi Takatsuji(Institute of Agrobiological Sciences)
The Plant Cell
June 1, 2007
Cited by 644Open Access
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Abstract

Benzothiadiazole (BTH) is a so-called plant activator and protects plants from diseases by activating the salicylic acid (SA) signaling pathway. By microarray screening, we identified BTH- and SA-inducible WRKY transcription factor (TF) genes that were upregulated within 3 h after BTH treatment. Overexpression of one of them, WRKY45, in rice (Oryza sativa) markedly enhanced resistance to rice blast fungus. RNA interference-mediated knockdown of WRKY45 compromised BTH-inducible resistance to blast disease, indicating that it is essential for BTH-induced defense responses. In a transient expression system, WRKY45 activated reporter gene transcription through W-boxes. Epistasis analysis suggested that WRKY45 acts in the SA signaling pathway independently of NH1, a rice ortholog of Arabidopsis thaliana NPR1, which distinguishes WRKY45 from known Arabidopsis WRKY TFs. Two defense-related genes, encoding a glutathione S-transferase and a cytochrome P450, were found to be regulated downstream of WRKY45 but were not regulated by NH1, consistent with the apparent independence of the WRKY45- and NH1-dependent pathways. Defense gene expression in WRKY45-overexpressed rice plants varied with growth conditions, suggesting that some environmental factor(s) acts downstream of WRKY45 transcription. We propose a role for WRKY45 in BTH-induced and SA-mediated defense signaling in rice and its potential utility in improving disease resistance of rice, an importance food resource worldwide.


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