Discovery of potential protein biomarkers associated with sugarcane white leaf disease susceptibility using a comparative proteomic approach

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Abstract

Sugarcane white leaf disease (SCWLD) is caused by phytoplasma, a serious sugarcane phytoplasma pathogen, which causes significant decreases in crop yield and sugar quality. The identification of proteins involved in the defense mechanism against SCWLD phytoplasma may help towards the development of varieties resistant to SCWLD. We investigated the proteomes of four sugarcane varieties with different levels of susceptibility to SCWLD phytoplasma infection, namely K88-92 and K95-84 (high), KK3 (moderate), and UT1 (low) by quantitative label-free nano-liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (nano LC-MS/MS). A total of 248 proteins were identified and compared among the four sugarcane varieties. Two potential candidate protein biomarkers for reduced susceptibility to SCWLD phytoplasma were identified as proteins detected only in UT1. The functions of these proteins are associated with protein folding, metal ion binding, and oxidoreductase. The candidate biomarkers could be useful for further study of the sugarcane defense mechanism against SCWLD phytoplasma, and in molecular and conventional breeding strategies for variety improvement.

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Leetanasaksakul, K., Roytrakul, S., Phaonakrop, N., Kittisenachai, S., Thaisakun, S., Srithuanok, N., … Soulard, L. (2022). Discovery of potential protein biomarkers associated with sugarcane white leaf disease susceptibility using a comparative proteomic approach. PeerJ, 9. https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.12740

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