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A Proteomic Approach to Identifying Defense Related Proteins in Rice Challenged with the Fungal Pathogen Rhizoctonia Solani

Sheath blight caused by the fungal pathogen fungus Rhizoctonia solani Kuhn, is an economically important disease of rice in the southern United States. The overall goal of this study was to identify proteins that were affected by sheath blight development by comparing protein expression patterns between the susceptible, wild-type cultivar Labelle and the resistant, mutant line LSBR-5. Protein samples were extracted from inoculated and non-inoculated rice leaf sheaths after 24 hrs and then loaded onto a Bio-Rad 2-DE gel system. Approximately 1,000 protein spots stained with Sypro-Ruby were reproducibly resolved in all gels used in the comparison analysis. The comparison analysis of relative abundances of protein spots between inoculated and non-inoculated samples was carried out with PDQUEST image analysis software. With MS/MS spectra produced by ESI-Q-TOF analysis, 27 out of a total of 36 protein spots were identified through NCBI nr and NCBI EST database searching with Mascot MS/MS Ion Search Engines (Matrix Sciences). Twenty two protein spots were detected in response to inoculation of both susceptible and resistant plants where 21 protein spots were up-regulated and 1 protein spot was down- regulated. Sixteen of the 22 proteins were identified. The presumed functions of the identified proteins were related to antifungal activity, energy metabolism, photosynthesis, protein degradation, and antioxidation. Eight of 16 identified proteins showed higher expression ratios in the inoculated LSBR-5 than in the inoculated Labelle. An additional 14 protein spots were detected in the response of the resistant LSBR-5. Eleven of 14 protein spots were identified with presumed functions relating to antifungal activity, signal transduction, energy metabolism, photosynthesis, molecular chaperone, protein degradation, and antioxidation.
This study is the first to monitor protein expression patterns of the rice leaf-sheath responding to challenge by R. solani and to detect response differences between resistant mutant and susceptible parental material. The information and detected proteins in this study will serve as a solid foundation for future studies to elucidate induced defense mechanisms of rice when infected with R. solani.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:LSU/oai:etd.lsu.edu:etd-04132005-091358
Date14 April 2005
CreatorsLee, Joohyun
ContributorsGerald O Myers, Marybeth Lima, Milton Rush, James Oard, Terry Bricker, Philip Elzer
PublisherLSU
Source SetsLouisiana State University
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typetext
Formatapplication/pdf
Sourcehttp://etd.lsu.edu/docs/available/etd-04132005-091358/
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