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Cloning of the wheat Yr15 resistance gene sheds light on the plant tandem kinase-pseudokinase family
- Klymiuk, Valentina;
- Yaniv, Elitsur;
- Huang, Lin;
- Raats, Dina;
- Fatiukha, Andrii;
- Chen, Shisheng;
- Feng, Lihua;
- Frenkel, Zeev;
- Krugman, Tamar;
- Lidzbarsky, Gabriel;
- Chang, Wei;
- Jääskeläinen, Marko J;
- Schudoma, Christian;
- Paulin, Lars;
- Laine, Pia;
- Bariana, Harbans;
- Sela, Hanan;
- Saleem, Kamran;
- Sørensen, Chris Khadgi;
- Hovmøller, Mogens S;
- Distelfeld, Assaf;
- Chalhoub, Boulos;
- Dubcovsky, Jorge;
- Korol, Abraham B;
- Schulman, Alan H;
- Fahima, Tzion
- et al.
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-06138-9Abstract
Yellow rust, caused by Puccinia striiformis f. sp. tritici (Pst), is a devastating fungal disease threatening much of global wheat production. Race-specific resistance (R)-genes are used to control rust diseases, but the rapid emergence of virulent Pst races has prompted the search for a more durable resistance. Here, we report the cloning of Yr15, a broad-spectrum R-gene derived from wild emmer wheat, which encodes a putative kinase-pseudokinase protein, designated as wheat tandem kinase 1, comprising a unique R-gene structure in wheat. The existence of a similar gene architecture in 92 putative proteins across the plant kingdom, including the barley RPG1 and a candidate for Ug8, suggests that they are members of a distinct family of plant proteins, termed here tandem kinase-pseudokinases (TKPs). The presence of kinase-pseudokinase structure in both plant TKPs and the animal Janus kinases sheds light on the molecular evolution of immune responses across these two kingdoms.
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