Researchers receive $1.59M grant
to map genome
of parasitic worm
NC State
scientists, in collaboration with Orion Genomics LLC, have received
a two-year, $1.59 million grant from the
National Research Initiative of the U.S. Department of Agriculture's
Cooperative State Research, Education and Extension Service (CSREES)
through the National Science Foundation/CSREES Microbial Genome Sequencing
Program to map the genome of one of the world’s most common and
destructive plant parasites – the microscopic, soil-dwelling root-knot
nematode.
Dr. Charles Opperman,
professor of plant pathology, co-director of the Center for the Biology
of Nematode Parasitism and the primary
investigator for the grant, says the research may help lead to novel
means of managing the ubiquitous worm. The resulting sequence data will
be made public, so other researchers interested in certain aspects of
the root-knot nematode – how it develops, establishes a host-parasite
interaction or evades host defenses, for example – will then be
able to use the map of the parasite’s genes as a tool to discover
more specific information about the parasite. The root-knot nematode
will be the first parasitic nematode to have its genome sequenced, Opperman
says.
Arguably the single most important plant parasitic nematode, Opperman
estimates the root-knot nematode causes more than half of the $100 billion
in crop and plant damage caused by nematodes yearly. It infects some
2,000 plant species, causing galls or knots on the roots of its victims.
It is also an ubiquitous pest for the home gardener.
“Root-knot nematodes invade behind the root tip and migrate to
the area of the plant where water and nutrients are transported. A female
root-knot nematode will then become sedentary and produce as many as
1,000 eggs in 30 days, which will hatch and re-infect the roots. So you
can have multiple generations infecting plants in one season,” Opperman
says.
Above ground, infected plants will show stunted growth or become yellowed
or wilted. The root-knot nematode does not discriminate, infecting peanuts,
tomatoes and soybeans, just to name a few widely grown crops.
Finding a way to manage or
control the root-knot nematode population hasn’t always been
very successful to date, Opperman says, mostly due to the high costs
of chemical nematicides
“The root-knot nematode’s tolerance to pesticides is quite
robust, so in many cases the defenses against root-knot nematodes are
more toxic to vertebrates than to the nematodes,” he says. “There
are also non-target effects of pesticides to worry about, like the groundwater
and other environmental concerns.”
NC State’s Genome Research
Laboratory will perform about half of the sequencing work, with collaborator
Orion Genomics LLC performing
the remainder. Collaborating with Opperman on the project are Dr. Bryon
Sosinski, director of the Genome Research Lab, and Dr. David Bird, associate
professor of plant pathology and co-director of the Center for the Biology
of Nematode Parasitism. A variety of post-doctoral students, graduate
students and undergraduates will be involved in the project.
“This project represents a significant step forward in the quest
to understand the molecular and genetic basis of plant parasitic nematodes’ ability
to attack crop plants, and will provide an invaluable resource to researchers
around the world,” Opperman says.
Posted
December 17, 2004
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