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Creators/Authors contains: "Schudoma, Christian"

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  1. Abstract Introducing and characterizing variation through mutagenesis plus functional genomics can accelerate resistance breeding as well as our understanding of crop plant immunity. To reveal new germplasm resources for fungal disease resistance breeding in elite durum wheat, we challenged the diverse alleles in a sequenced and cataloged ethyl methanesulfonate mutagenized population of elite tetraploid wheatTriticum turgidumsubsp.durumcv ‘Kronos’ with stripe rust. We screened 2,000 mutant lines and identified sixteen enhanced disease resistance (EDR) lines with persistent resistance to stripe rust over four years of field testing. To find broad-spectrum resistance, we challenged these lines with other major biotrophic and necrotrophic pathogens, including those causing Septoria tritici blotch, tan spot, Fusarium head blight and leaf rust. Enhanced resistance to multiple fungi was found in 13 of 16 EDR lines. Five EDR lines showed spontaneous lesion formation in the absence of pathogens, providing new mutant resources to study plant stress response in the absence of the confounding effects of pathogen infection. We mapped exome capture sequencing data of the EDR lines to a recently released long-read Kronos genome to aid in the identification of causal mutations. We located an EDR resistance locus to an 175 Mb interval on chromosome 1B. Importantly, these phenotypically characterized EDR lines are newly described durum germplasm coupled with improved functional genomics resources that are readily available for both wheat fungal resistance breeding and basic plant immunity research. 
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  2. Abstract Plant innate immunity relies on nucleotide binding leucine-rich repeat receptors (NLRs) that recognize pathogen-derived molecules and activate downstream signaling pathways. We analyzed the variation in NLR gene copy number and identified plants with a low number of NLR genes relative to sister species. We specifically focused on four plants from two distinct lineages, one monocot lineage (Alismatales) and one eudicot lineage (Lentibulariaceae). In these lineages, the loss of NLR genes coincides with loss of the well-known downstream immune signaling complex ENHANCED DISEASE SUSCEPTIBILITY 1 (EDS1)/PHYTOALEXIN DEFICIENT 4 (PAD4). We expanded our analysis across whole proteomes and found that other characterized immune genes were absent only in Lentibulariaceae and Alismatales. Additionally, we identified genes of unknown function that were convergently lost together with EDS1/PAD4 in five plant species. Gene expression analyses in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) and Oryza sativa revealed that several homologs of the candidates are differentially expressed during pathogen infection, drought, and abscisic acid treatment. Our analysis provides evolutionary evidence for the rewiring of plant immunity in some plant lineages, as well as the coevolution of the EDS1/PAD4 pathway and drought responses. 
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