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Introduction of Large Sequence Inserts by CRISPR-Cas9 To Create Pathogenicity Mutants in the Multinucleate Filamentous Pathogen Sclerotinia sclerotiorum
by
Zhang, Yanhua
, Yu, Pei-Ling
, Li, Jingtao
, Rollins, Jeffrey A.
, Pan, Hongyu
, Zhang, Yucheng
in
Acid production
/ Acids
/ Ascomycota - genetics
/ Ascomycota - growth & development
/ Ascomycota - metabolism
/ Ascomycota - pathogenicity
/ Biosynthesis
/ Brassica - microbiology
/ Cas9
/ Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats
/ CRISPR
/ CRISPR-Cas Systems
/ Disease resistance
/ Efficiency
/ filamentous fungi
/ Food security
/ functional genomics
/ Fungal Proteins - genetics
/ Fungal Proteins - metabolism
/ Gene disruption
/ Genetic engineering
/ Genomes
/ Genotype & phenotype
/ Glycine max - microbiology
/ Host plants
/ Melanin
/ Mutagenesis, Insertional
/ Mutants
/ Mutation
/ necrotroph
/ Non-homologous end joining
/ Nucleotide sequence
/ Oxalic acid
/ Pathogenicity
/ Pathogens
/ Phenotypes
/ Plant diseases
/ Plant Diseases - microbiology
/ Plasmids
/ Plasmids - genetics
/ Plasmids - metabolism
/ Point mutation
/ Sclerotinia sclerotiorum
/ Solanum lycopersicum - microbiology
/ Spores, Fungal - genetics
/ Spores, Fungal - growth & development
/ Spores, Fungal - metabolism
/ Spores, Fungal - pathogenicity
/ Structure-function relationships
/ Vectors
/ Virulence
/ Virulence factors
2018
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Introduction of Large Sequence Inserts by CRISPR-Cas9 To Create Pathogenicity Mutants in the Multinucleate Filamentous Pathogen Sclerotinia sclerotiorum
by
Zhang, Yanhua
, Yu, Pei-Ling
, Li, Jingtao
, Rollins, Jeffrey A.
, Pan, Hongyu
, Zhang, Yucheng
in
Acid production
/ Acids
/ Ascomycota - genetics
/ Ascomycota - growth & development
/ Ascomycota - metabolism
/ Ascomycota - pathogenicity
/ Biosynthesis
/ Brassica - microbiology
/ Cas9
/ Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats
/ CRISPR
/ CRISPR-Cas Systems
/ Disease resistance
/ Efficiency
/ filamentous fungi
/ Food security
/ functional genomics
/ Fungal Proteins - genetics
/ Fungal Proteins - metabolism
/ Gene disruption
/ Genetic engineering
/ Genomes
/ Genotype & phenotype
/ Glycine max - microbiology
/ Host plants
/ Melanin
/ Mutagenesis, Insertional
/ Mutants
/ Mutation
/ necrotroph
/ Non-homologous end joining
/ Nucleotide sequence
/ Oxalic acid
/ Pathogenicity
/ Pathogens
/ Phenotypes
/ Plant diseases
/ Plant Diseases - microbiology
/ Plasmids
/ Plasmids - genetics
/ Plasmids - metabolism
/ Point mutation
/ Sclerotinia sclerotiorum
/ Solanum lycopersicum - microbiology
/ Spores, Fungal - genetics
/ Spores, Fungal - growth & development
/ Spores, Fungal - metabolism
/ Spores, Fungal - pathogenicity
/ Structure-function relationships
/ Vectors
/ Virulence
/ Virulence factors
2018
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Introduction of Large Sequence Inserts by CRISPR-Cas9 To Create Pathogenicity Mutants in the Multinucleate Filamentous Pathogen Sclerotinia sclerotiorum
by
Zhang, Yanhua
, Yu, Pei-Ling
, Li, Jingtao
, Rollins, Jeffrey A.
, Pan, Hongyu
, Zhang, Yucheng
in
Acid production
/ Acids
/ Ascomycota - genetics
/ Ascomycota - growth & development
/ Ascomycota - metabolism
/ Ascomycota - pathogenicity
/ Biosynthesis
/ Brassica - microbiology
/ Cas9
/ Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats
/ CRISPR
/ CRISPR-Cas Systems
/ Disease resistance
/ Efficiency
/ filamentous fungi
/ Food security
/ functional genomics
/ Fungal Proteins - genetics
/ Fungal Proteins - metabolism
/ Gene disruption
/ Genetic engineering
/ Genomes
/ Genotype & phenotype
/ Glycine max - microbiology
/ Host plants
/ Melanin
/ Mutagenesis, Insertional
/ Mutants
/ Mutation
/ necrotroph
/ Non-homologous end joining
/ Nucleotide sequence
/ Oxalic acid
/ Pathogenicity
/ Pathogens
/ Phenotypes
/ Plant diseases
/ Plant Diseases - microbiology
/ Plasmids
/ Plasmids - genetics
/ Plasmids - metabolism
/ Point mutation
/ Sclerotinia sclerotiorum
/ Solanum lycopersicum - microbiology
/ Spores, Fungal - genetics
/ Spores, Fungal - growth & development
/ Spores, Fungal - metabolism
/ Spores, Fungal - pathogenicity
/ Structure-function relationships
/ Vectors
/ Virulence
/ Virulence factors
2018
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Introduction of Large Sequence Inserts by CRISPR-Cas9 To Create Pathogenicity Mutants in the Multinucleate Filamentous Pathogen Sclerotinia sclerotiorum
Journal Article
Introduction of Large Sequence Inserts by CRISPR-Cas9 To Create Pathogenicity Mutants in the Multinucleate Filamentous Pathogen Sclerotinia sclerotiorum
2018
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Overview
The necrotrophic fungal plant pathogen
Sclerotinia sclerotiorum
is responsible for substantial global crop losses annually resulting in localized food insecurity and loss of livelihood. Understanding the basis of this broad-host-range and aggressive pathogenicity is hampered by the quantitative nature of both host resistance and pathogen virulence. To improve this understanding, methods for efficient functional gene characterization that build upon the existing complete
S. sclerotiorum
genome sequence are needed. Here, we report on the development of a clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeat (CRISPR)–CRISPR-associated protein 9 (CRISPR-Cas9)-mediated strategy for creating gene disruption mutants and the application of this technique for exploring roles of known and hypothesized virulence factors. A key finding of this research is that transformation with a circular plasmid encoding Cas9, target single guide RNA (sgRNA), and a selectable marker resulted in a high frequency of targeted, insertional gene mutation. We observed that 100% of the mutants integrated large rearranged segments of the transforming plasmid at the target site facilitated by the nonhomologous end joining (NHEJ) repair pathway. This result was confirmed in multiple target sites within the same gene in three independent wild-type isolates of
S. sclerotiorum
and in a second independent gene. Targeting the previously characterized
Ssoah1
gene allowed us to confirm the loss-of-function nature of the CRISPR-Cas9-mediated mutants and explore new aspects of the mutant phenotype. Applying this technology to create mutations in a second previously uncharacterized gene allowed us to determine the requirement for melanin accumulation in infection structure development and function.
IMPORTANCE
Fungi that cause plant diseases by rotting or blighting host tissue with limited specificity remain among the most difficult to control. This is largely due to the quantitative nature of host resistance and a limited understanding of fungal pathogenicity. A mechanistic understanding of pathogenicity requires the ability to manipulate candidate virulence genes to test hypotheses regarding their roles in disease development.
Sclerotinia sclerotiorum
is among the most notorious of these so-called broad-host-range necrotrophic plant pathogens. The work described here provides a new method for rapidly constructing gene disruption vectors to create gene mutations with high efficiency compared with existing methods. Applying this method to characterize gene functions in
S. sclerotiorum
, we confirm the requirement for oxalic acid production as a virulence factor in multiple isolates of the fungus and demonstrate that melanin accumulation is not required for infection. Using this approach, the pace of functional gene characterization and the understanding of pathogenicity and related disease resistance will increase.
Fungi that cause plant diseases by rotting or blighting host tissue with limited specificity remain among the most difficult to control. This is largely due to the quantitative nature of host resistance and a limited understanding of fungal pathogenicity. A mechanistic understanding of pathogenicity requires the ability to manipulate candidate virulence genes to test hypotheses regarding their roles in disease development.
Sclerotinia sclerotiorum
is among the most notorious of these so-called broad-host-range necrotrophic plant pathogens. The work described here provides a new method for rapidly constructing gene disruption vectors to create gene mutations with high efficiency compared with existing methods. Applying this method to characterize gene functions in
S. sclerotiorum
, we confirm the requirement for oxalic acid production as a virulence factor in multiple isolates of the fungus and demonstrate that melanin accumulation is not required for infection. Using this approach, the pace of functional gene characterization and the understanding of pathogenicity and related disease resistance will increase.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
/ Acids
/ Ascomycota - growth & development
/ Cas9
/ Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats
/ CRISPR
/ Fungal Proteins - metabolism
/ Genomes
/ Melanin
/ Mutants
/ Mutation
/ Plant Diseases - microbiology
/ Plasmids
/ Solanum lycopersicum - microbiology
/ Spores, Fungal - growth & development
/ Spores, Fungal - pathogenicity
/ Structure-function relationships
/ Vectors
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