|
|
|
|
Publication no. M-2001-0129-02R
Signal Peptide-Selection of cDNA Cloned Directly from the Esophageal Gland
Cells of the Soybean Cyst Nematode Heterodera glycines. Xiaohong Wang
(1), Rex Allen (2), Xiongfei Ding (2), Melissa Goellner (1), Tom Maier (3), Jan
M. de Boer (3), Thomas J. Baum (3), Richard S. Hussey (2), and Eric L. Davis
(1). (1) Department of Plant Pathology, North Carolina State University, Box
7616, Raleigh 27695-7616, U.S.A.; (2) Department of Plant Pathology, University
of Georgia, Athens 30602-7274, U.S.A.; (3) Department of Plant Pathology, Iowa
State University, 351 Bessey Hall, Ames 50011, U.S.A. MPMI 14:536-544. Accepted
14 December 2000. Copyright 2001 The American Phytopathological Society.
Secretions from the esophageal gland cells of plant-parasitic nematodes play
critical roles in the nematode-parasitic cycle. A novel method to isolate cDNA
encoding putative nematode secretory proteins was developed that utilizes mRNA
for reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction derived from microaspiration
of the esophageal gland cell contents of parasitic stages of the soybean cyst
nematode Heterodera glycines. The resulting H. glycines gland cell
cDNA was cloned into the pRK18 vector, and plasmid DNA was transformed into a
mutated yeast host for specific selection of cDNA inserts that encode proteins
with functional signal peptides. Of the 223 cDNA clones recovered from selection
in yeast, 97% of the clones encoded a predicted signal peptide. Fourteen unique
cDNA clones hybridized to genomic DNA of H. glycines on Southern blots
and, among them, nine cDNA clones encoded putative extracellular proteins, as
predicted by PSORT II computer analysis. Four cDNA clones hybridized to
transcripts within the dorsal esophageal gland cell of parasitic stages of H.
glycines, and in situ hybridization within H. glycines was not
detected for eight cDNA clones. The protocol provides a direct means to isolate
potential plant-parasitic nematode esophageal gland secretory protein genes. Additional
keywords: expressed sequence tags, functional genomics, host-parasite
interactions, nematode feeding sites, parasitism genes.
|