PubMed 36731748

PubMed ID: 36731748

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CRISPRa-mediated transcriptional activation of the SlPR-1 gene in edited tomato plants.
Authors: García-Murillo Leonardo, Valencia-Lozano Eliana, Priego-Ranero Nicolás Alberto, Cabrera-Ponce José Luis, Duarte-Aké Fátima Patricia, Vizuet-de-Rueda Juan Carlos, Rivera-Toro Diana Marcela, Herrera-Ubaldo Humberto, de Folter Stefan, Alvarez-Venegas Raúl
Journal: Plant science : an international journal of experimental plant biology (Plant Sci), Vol.329(), 2023‑Apr

DOI: 10.1016/j.plantsci.2023.111617

Abstract
With the continuous deterioration of arable land due to an ever-growing population, improvement of crops and crop protection have a fundamental role in maintaining and increasing crop productivity. Alternatives to the use of pesticides encompass the use of biological control agents, generation of new resistant crop cultivars, the application of plant activator agrochemicals to enhance plant defenses, and the use of gene editing techniques, like the CRISPR-Cas system. Here, we test the hypothesis that epigenome editing, via CRISPR activation (CRISPRa), activate tomato plant defense genes to confer resistance against pathogen attack. We provide evidence that edited tomato plants for the PATHOGENESIS-RELATED GENE 1 gene (SlPR-1) show enhanced disease resistance to Clavibacter michiganensis subsp. michiganensis infection. Resistance was assessed by evaluating disease progression and symptom appearance, pathogen accumulation, and changes in SlPR-1 gene expression at different time points. We determined that CRISPRa-edited plants develop enhanced disease-resistant to the pathogen without altering their agronomic characteristics and, above all, preventing the advancement of disease symptoms, stem canker, and plant death.
Publication Types
Journal Article
Keywords
CRISPR/dCas9 Epigenome editing PR-1 gene Plant-pathogen interaction Tomato
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