A single gene encodes a selective toxin causal to the development of tan spot of wheat

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Abstract

The identification and characterization of pathogenicity factors are essential to an understanding of the molecular events that regulate the interaction of plant-pathogenic microbes with their hosts. We have isolated the gene that encodes a host-selective toxic protein produced by the fungus Pyrenophora tritici-repentis and confirmed that this gene functions in the plant as the primary determinant of pathogenicity in the Pyrenophora-wheat interaction. These results demonstrate that a single gene encodes the production of a host-selective toxin and that transformation of this gene into a non-toxin-producing isolate of P. tritici-repentis leads to both toxin production and pathogenicity.

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Ciuffetti, L. M., Tuori, R. P., & Gaventa, J. M. (1997). A single gene encodes a selective toxin causal to the development of tan spot of wheat. Plant Cell, 9(2), 135–144. https://doi.org/10.1105/tpc.9.2.135

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