Euphytica (2019) 215 (2 - 25)

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Bahram Heidari, Maria Begoña Miras Moreno, Luigi Lucini, Melvin Bolton, Mitchell J. McGrath, Chiara Broccanello, Ilaria Alberti, Luca Sella, Giuseppe Concheri, Andrea Squartini, Massimo Cagnin, Mahdi Hassani, Alessandro Romano and Piergiorgio Stevanato (2019)
Mass spectrometry-based metabolomic discrimination of Cercospora leaf spot resistant and susceptible sugar beet germplasms
Euphytica 215 (2 - 25)
Abstract: A better understanding of the plant metabolites produced in response to disease infection may be useful for the development of disease-resistant crop varieties. In the present study, ultra high-performance liquid chromatography coupled to quadrupole-time-of-flight mass spectrometry (QTOF-MS) was used to identify differentially accumulated metabolites in a subset of sugar beet genotypes harbouring different levels of resistance to Cercospora leaf spot (CLS), a disease caused by the fungal pathogen Cercospora beticola. Leaves of three susceptible (S1, S2 and S3) and two resistant (R1 and R2) genotypes were subjected to QTOF-MS for metabolite profiling. A wide range of metabolites was identified in sugar beet genotypes using metabolomics. Results of Partial Least Squares-Discriminant Analysis indicated that 15 metabolites could better discriminate resistant and susceptible genotypes. A Volcano Plot analysis indicated that the flavonoid quercetin 3-O-(6"-O-p-coumaroyl)-glucoside and gibberellin A51 with the highest absolute fold change (FC = 16), were repressed in resistant samples. Among the 3 metabolites (isovitexin-7-O-xyloside, 3-demethylubiquinol-8 and apigenin 7-O-d-glucoside) showing significant up accumulation in CLS-resistant samples, the flavonoid isovitexin-7-O-xyloside (FC = 4825.634) is associated with resistance to infection with fungal species causing the disease in other crops. Although further studies are still necessary to better elucidate the mechanism of resistance, our results suggest that breeders might exclude susceptible plants based on discriminating metabolites without the need for field inoculation tests. The results also create a solid basis for metabolite-associated reverse genetics and single nucleotide polymorphism discovery based on significantly differentially accumulated metabolites, whose identification is a next strategic priority. The results obtained also underline the role of metabolic signature in CLS resistance mechanisms and provide a platform for the metabolic engineering of sugar beet with higher resistance against C. beticola pathogen.
(The abstract is excluded from the Creative Commons licence and has been copied with permission by the publisher.)
Link to article at publishers website
Database assignments for author(s): Melvin D. Bolton, Piergiorgio Stevanato

Research topic(s) for pests/diseases/weeds:
resistance/tolerance/defence of host


Pest and/or beneficial records:

Beneficial Pest/Disease/Weed Crop/Product Country Quarant.


Cercospora beticola Beet/sugarbeet (Beta vulgaris)