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Study examines how tomatoes resist bacterial wilt disease

Bacteria within the Ralstonia solanacearum species complex cause devastating diseases in numerous crops, causing important losses in food production and industrial supply. Despite extensive efforts to enhance plant tolerance to disease caused by Ralstonia, efficient and sustainable approaches are still missing.

Before, researchers found that Ralstonia promotes the production of gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) in plant cells; GABA can be used as a nutrient by Ralstonia to sustain the massive bacterial replication during plant colonization. In this work, the researchers used CRISPR-Cas9-mediated genome editing to mutate SlGAD2, which encodes the major glutamate decarboxylase responsible for GABA production in tomato, a major crop affected by Ralstonia. The resulting Slgad2 mutant plants show reduced GABA content, and enhanced tolerance to bacterial wilt disease upon Ralstonia inoculation. Slgad2 mutant plants did not show altered susceptibility to other tested biotic and abiotic stresses, including drought and heat.

Interestingly, Slgad2 mutant plants showed altered microbiome composition in roots and soil. Researchers reveal a strategy to enhance plant resistance to Ralstonia by the manipulation of plant metabolism leading to an impairment of bacterial fitness. This approach could be particularly efficient in combination with other strategies based on the manipulation of the plant immune system, paving the way to a sustainable solution to Ralstonia in agricultural systems.

Zhao, A., Li, Q., Meng, P., Liu, P., Wu, S., Lang, Z., Song, Y. and Macho, A.P. (2024), Reduced content of gamma-aminobutyric acid enhances resistance to bacterial wilt disease in tomato. Plant Biotechnol. J. https://doi.org/10.1111/pbi.14539

Source: Wiley Online Library

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