Severine Hurni
University of Zurich
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Publication
Featured researches published by Severine Hurni.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015
Severine Hurni; Daniela Scheuermann; Simon G. Krattinger; Bettina Kessel; Thomas Wicker; Gerhard Herren; Mirjam N. Fitze; James Breen; Thomas Presterl; Milena Ouzunova; Beat Keller
Significance Northern corn leaf blight (NCLB) is one of the most devastating fungal diseases of maize. The Htn1 disease resistance gene confers quantitative field resistance against most NCLB isolates. Here we show that Htn1 encodes a putative wall-associated receptor-like kinase (RLK). RLKs act as important components of the first tier of the plant innate immune system by perceiving pathogen- or host-derived elicitors on the cell surface. RLKs are often associated with resistance to nonadapted pathogens and are a component of nonhost resistance. Our work demonstrates that the Htn1-RLK plays an important role in host resistance against adapted fungal pathogens. Northern corn leaf blight (NCLB) caused by the hemibiotrophic fungus Exserohilum turcicum is an important foliar disease of maize that is mainly controlled by growing resistant maize cultivars. The Htn1 locus confers quantitative and partial NCLB resistance by delaying the onset of lesion formation. Htn1 represents an important source of genetic resistance that was originally introduced from a Mexican landrace into modern maize breeding lines in the 1970s. Using a high-resolution map-based cloning approach, we delimited Htn1 to a 131.7-kb physical interval on chromosome 8 that contained three candidate genes encoding two wall-associated receptor-like kinases (ZmWAK-RLK1 and ZmWAK-RLK2) and one wall-associated receptor-like protein (ZmWAK-RLP1). TILLING (targeting induced local lesions in genomes) mutants in ZmWAK-RLK1 were more susceptible to NCLB than wild-type plants, both in greenhouse experiments and in the field. ZmWAK-RLK1 contains a nonarginine-aspartate (non-RD) kinase domain, typically found in plant innate immune receptors. Sequence comparison showed that the extracellular domain of ZmWAK-RLK1 is highly diverse between different maize genotypes. Furthermore, an alternative splice variant resulting in a truncated protein was present at higher frequency in the susceptible parents of the mapping populations compared with in the resistant parents. Hence, the quantitative Htn1 disease resistance in maize is encoded by an unusual innate immune receptor with an extracellular wall-associated kinase domain. These results further highlight the importance of this protein family in resistance to adapted pathogens.
Plant Journal | 2010
Susanne Brunner; Severine Hurni; Philipp Streckeisen; Gabriele Mayr; Mario Albrecht; Nabila Yahiaoui; Beat Keller
Some plant resistance genes occur as allelic series, with each member conferring specific resistance against a subset of pathogen races. In wheat, there are 17 alleles of the Pm3 gene. They encode nucleotide-binding (NB-ARC) and leucine-rich-repeat (LRR) domain proteins, which mediate resistance to distinct race spectra of powdery mildew. It is not known if specificities from different alleles can be combined to create resistance genes with broader specificity. Here, we used an approach based on avirulence analysis of pathogen populations to characterize the molecular basis of Pm3 recognition spectra. A large survey of mildew races for avirulence on the Pm3 alleles revealed that Pm3a has a resistance spectrum that completely contains that of Pm3f, but also extends towards additional races. The same is true for the Pm3b and Pm3c gene pair. The molecular analysis of these allelic pairs revealed a role of the NB-ARC protein domain in the efficiency of effector-dependent resistance. Analysis of the wild-type and chimeric Pm3 alleles identified single residues in the C-terminal LRR motifs as the main determinant of allele specificity. Variable residues of the N-terminal LRRs are necessary, but not sufficient, to confer resistance specificity. Based on these data, we constructed a chimeric Pm3 gene by intragenic allele pyramiding of Pm3d and Pm3e that showed the combined resistance specificity and, thus, a broader recognition spectrum compared with the parental alleles. Our findings support a model of stepwise evolution of Pm3 recognition specificities.
Plant Journal | 2014
Severine Hurni; Susanne Brunner; Daniel Stirnweis; Gerhard Herren; David Peditto; R. A. McIntosh; Beat Keller
The powdery mildew resistance gene Pm8 derived from rye is located on a 1BL.1RS chromosome translocation in wheat. However, some wheat lines with this translocation do not show resistance to isolates of the wheat powdery mildew pathogen avirulent to Pm8 due to an unknown genetically dominant suppression mechanism. Here we show that lines with suppressed Pm8 activity contain an intact and expressed Pm8 gene. Therefore, the absence of Pm8 function in certain 1BL.1RS-containing wheat lines is not the result of gene loss or mutation but is based on suppression. The wheat gene Pm3, an ortholog of rye Pm8, suppressed Pm8-mediated powdery mildew resistance in lines containing Pm8 in a transient single-cell expression assay. This result was further confirmed in transgenic lines with combined Pm8 and Pm3 transgenes. Expression analysis revealed that suppression is not the result of gene silencing, either in wheat 1BL.1RS translocation lines carrying Pm8 or in transgenic genotypes with both Pm8 and Pm3 alleles. In addition, a similar abundance of the PM8 and PM3 proteins in single or double homozygous transgenic lines suggested that a post-translational mechanism is involved in suppression of Pm8. Co-expression of Pm8 and Pm3 genes in Nicotiana benthamiana leaves followed by co-immunoprecipitation analysis showed that the two proteins interact. Therefore, the formation of a heteromeric protein complex might result in inefficient or absent signal transmission for the defense reaction. These data provide a molecular explanation for the suppression of resistance genes in certain genetic backgrounds and suggest ways to circumvent it in future plant breeding.
Genome Biology | 2016
Javier Sanchez-Martin; Burkhard Steuernagel; Sreya Ghosh; Gerhard Herren; Severine Hurni; Nikolai M. Adamski; Jan Vrána; Marie Kubaláková; Simon G. Krattinger; Thomas Wicker; Jaroslav Doležel; Beat Keller; Brande B. H. Wulff
Identification of causal mutations in barley and wheat is hampered by their large genomes and suppressed recombination. To overcome these obstacles, we have developed MutChromSeq, a complexity reduction approach based on flow sorting and sequencing of mutant chromosomes, to identify induced mutations by comparison to parental chromosomes. We apply MutChromSeq to six mutants each of the barley Eceriferum-q gene and the wheat Pm2 genes. This approach unambiguously identified single candidate genes that were verified by Sanger sequencing of additional mutants. MutChromSeq enables reference-free forward genetics in barley and wheat, thus opening up their pan-genomes to functional genomics.
Plant Journal | 2013
Severine Hurni; Susanne Brunner; Gabriele Buchmann; Gerhard Herren; Tina Jordan; Patricia Krukowski; Thomas Wicker; Nabila Yahiaoui; Rohit Mago; Beat Keller
The improvement of wheat through breeding has relied strongly on the use of genetic material from related wild and domesticated grass species. The 1RS chromosome arm from rye was introgressed into wheat and crossed into many wheat lines, as it improves yield and fungal disease resistance. Pm8 is a powdery mildew resistance gene on 1RS which, after widespread agricultural cultivation, is now widely overcome by adapted mildew races. Here we show by homology-based cloning and subsequent physical and genetic mapping that Pm8 is the rye orthologue of the Pm3 allelic series of mildew resistance genes in wheat. The cloned gene was functionally validated as Pm8 by transient, single-cell expression analysis and stable transformation. Sequence analysis revealed a complex mosaic of ancient haplotypes among Pm3- and Pm8-like genes from different members of the Triticeae. These results show that the two genes have evolved independently after the divergence of the species 7.5 million years ago and kept their function in mildew resistance. During this long time span the co-evolving pathogens have not overcome these genes, which is in strong contrast to the breakdown of Pm8 resistance since its introduction into commercial wheat 70 years ago. Sequence comparison revealed that evolutionary pressure acted on the same subdomains and sequence features of the two orthologous genes. This suggests that they recognize directly or indirectly the same pathogen effectors that have been conserved in the powdery mildews of wheat and rye.
Archive | 2015
Beat Keller; Simon G. Krattinger; Liselotte L. Selter; Chauhan Harsh; Jyoti Singla; Susanne Brunner; Severine Hurni; Daniel Stirnweis; Margarita Shatalina; Thomas Wicker; Francis Parlange; Joanna M. Risk; Evans S. Lagudah
In the last years there has been enormous progress in the molecular understanding of fungal disease resistance in plants. Research on effector-based immunity which is mediated by major resistance (R) genes has been greatly stimulated by the molecular isolation of plant resistance genes as well as the first fungal effectors. In addition, the first genes underlying QTLs or partial disease resistance have been cloned. However, much of this work is still in a phase of basic research and there is a need for translational approaches to realize the globally needed improvements of disease resistance in wheat. In particular, it is essential that future strategies are aiming at achieving durable resistance against pathogens. Durable resistance has been defined by Johnson (Genetic background of durable resistance. In: Lamberti F, Waller JM, Van der Graaff NA (eds) Durable resistance in crops. Plenum, New York, pp 5–24, 1983) as a resistance which remains effective in cultivars that are widely grown for long periods and in environments favorable to the disease. In this article we will discuss different molecular strategies towards achieving durable disease resistance in wheat. In particular, our group focuses on the Pm3 allelic series of race-specific powdery mildew R genes and the Lr34/Yr18/Pm38/Sr57 race non-specific multi-pathogen resistance gene.
Plant Molecular Biology | 2018
Simrat Pal Singh; Severine Hurni; Michela Ruinelli; Susanne Brunner; Javier Sanchez-Martin; Patricia Krukowski; David Peditto; Gabriele Buchmann; Helen Zbinden; Beat Keller
Key messageWe have isolated a novel powdery mildew resistance gene in wheat that was originally introgressed from rye. Further analysis revealed evolutionary divergent history of wheat and rye orthologous resistance genes.AbstractWheat production is under constant threat from a number of fungal pathogens, among them is wheat powdery mildew (Blumeria graminis f. sp. tritici). Deployment of resistance genes is the most economical and sustainable method for mildew control. However, domestication and selective breeding have narrowed genetic diversity of modern wheat germplasm, and breeders have relied on wheat relatives for enriching its gene pool through introgression. Translocations where the 1RS chromosome arm was introgressed from rye to wheat have improved yield and resistance against various pathogens. Here, we isolated the Pm17 mildew resistance gene located on the 1RS introgression in wheat cultivar ‘Amigo’ and found that it is an allele or a close paralog of the Pm8 gene isolated earlier from ‘Petkus’ rye. Functional validation using transient and stable transformation confirmed the identity of Pm17. Analysis of Pm17 and Pm8 coding regions revealed an overall identity of 82.9% at the protein level, with the LRR domains being most divergent. Our analysis also showed that the two rye genes are much more diverse compared to the variants encoded by the Pm3 gene in wheat, which is orthologous to Pm17/Pm8 as concluded from highly conserved upstream sequences in all these genes. Thus, the evolutionary history of these orthologous loci differs in the cereal species rye and wheat and demonstrates that orthologous resistance genes can take different routes towards functionally active genes. These findings suggest that the isolation of Pm3/Pm8/Pm17 orthologs from other grass species, additional alleles from the rye germplasm as well as possibly synthetic variants will result in novel resistance genes useful in wheat breeding.
Plant Biotechnology Journal | 2011
Susanne Brunner; Severine Hurni; Gerhard Herren; Olena Kalinina; Simone von Burg; Simon L. Zeller; Bernhard Schmid; M. Winzeler; Beat Keller
Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2012
Parveen Chhuneja; Krishan Kumar; Daniel Stirnweis; Severine Hurni; Beat Keller; H. S. Dhaliwal; Kuldeep Singh
Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2015
Parveen Chhuneja; Bharat Yadav; Daniel Stirnweis; Severine Hurni; Satinder Kaur; Ahmed Fawzy Elkot; Beat Keller; Thomas Wicker; Sunish K. Sehgal; Bikram S. Gill; Kuldeep Singh