The use of
M. truncatula as a model system to characterize and determine the genetic basis of aphid resistance provides an opportunity to improve resistance to sap-sucking insects in agriculturally important legume crops, where aphids can be significant problems [
48]. The use of this system has already lead to the identification of single dominant and semi-dominant resistance genes for BGA, PA and SAA [
21-
25]. Besides these resistance genes, quantitative trait loci controlling different aspects of aphid resistance (e.g. antibiosis and tolerance) have also been identified in
M. truncatula for BGA and PA [
49]. While no resistance to CPA has previously been identified in
M. truncatula, only three pairs of closely-related lines of
M. truncatula were assayed and no significant differences were identified following CPA infestation [
20]. The present study screened a subset of the SARDI core collection of
M. truncatula accessions, that span the genetic diversity in this collection, for resistance to CPA. One accession, SA30199, was found to have an increased resistance to CPA compared to all other
M. truncatula accessions tested with the exception of SA3054 (Figure

). In initial no choice glasshouse screens, no visual differences were found in plant performance, with all
M. truncatula accessions showing degrees of stunting and wilting, and no obvious other macroscopic phenotypes such as local necrotic flecks as observed following bluegreen aphid or pea aphid infestation in some
M. truncatula accessions [
21,
23] or systemic vein chlorosis as seen following spotted alfalfa aphid infestation in susceptible
M. truncatula accessions [
24]. However, distinct differences in the population sizes of CPA on the different accessions with a notable lower population density on SA30199 was observed and confirmed in a subsequent short term experiment, where CPA had a significantly lower MRGR on
M. truncatula SA30199 compared to all other
M. truncatula accessions tested (Figure

).
Host selection by alatae is regarded as the first stage of colonisation and therefore plays a major role in aphid establishment in the field. In repeated host choice experiments with alatae of CPA, we found that the alatae preferentially settled on the susceptible accession Borung compared to the resistant SA30199 from 48h after release (Figure

). This is in contrast to the response of BGA in similar experiments where a clear preference for the susceptible line A17 compared to the resistant line Jester was visible within 6 h of release [
23]. However, the response of PA in a similar experiment using the lines Jester and A17 showed a similar result in host preference as seen for CPA with the settling preference only becoming apparent after 48 from release [
21], suggesting antixenosis is involved in the response and is likely derived from the inability to establish a successful feeding site.
In Electrical Penetration Graph (EPG) studies using adult CPAs, a reduction in salivation into the sieve element and a reduction of phloem sap ingestion on resistant SA30199 plants compared to susceptible Borung plants were identified. These significant differences, in contrast to the all other (pre-feeding) activities measured, suggest that resistance to CPA is phloem mediated. This combined with the host choice results also suggest the antixenotic effect of resistance, observed in the choice test, may be derived from the inhibition of sap uptake rather than cues from volatile compounds or surface waxes from SA30199. This is supported by the proportion of time that tethered apterae spent outside the cuticle, penetrating between cells en route to the vascular tissue, contacting xylem, derailed stylets or briefly puncturing cells, which did not differ significantly between Borung and SA30199 (Figure

C). The similarities between the behaviour of the aphids for these activities suggest that neither surface features (e.g. epicuticular waxes or trichomes) nor cell wall properties play a role in the resistance mechanism of SA30199. Feeding behaviour of CPA was also examined in narrow-leafed lupin, where CPA spend significantly more time in non-probing and stylet pathway activities and significantly less time in the phloem sieve element on the resistant cultivar Kalya compared to the susceptible cultivar Tallerack [
50]. Similarly, resistance to CPA in cowpea resistant cultivar ICV-12 compared to susceptible cultivar ICV-1 showed a reduction in the phloem sieve element phase [
29]. In all three cases a phloem-based deterrence therefore plays the major role in CPA resistance. Similar experiments conducted in
M. truncatula lines resistant and susceptible to BGA and PA revealed significant reductions in phloem feeding on the resistant lines and therefore all the identified aphid resistance in
M. truncatula to date appears to be exerted through the phloem [
21,
23].
If CPA resistance in SA30199 is based on phloem properties, the causal factor may be produced locally. This could be achieved by either a physical blockage of sap uptake at the feeding site through rapid polymerization and deposition of macromolecules such as callose or phloem proteins or by biosynthesis of resistance factors in the vicinity of aphid feeding sites. However, our finding that shoot excision eliminates CPA resistance in
M. truncatula SA30199 (Figure

) raises the possibility that a resistance factor(s) imported from the root or a root to shoot signal could be required to retain CPA resistance. The loss of phloem-based resistance to CPA on excised shoots of SA30199 (Figure

) has also been observed in the resistance to BGA and PA in the
M. truncatula accession Jester [
21,
23]. Reciprocal grafting experiments between SA30199 and Borung will be necessary to confirm the hypothesis that a resistance factor(s) is imported to the feeding site.
Pre-infestation (with CPA) had no significant effect on subsequent CPA feeding and the growth rate of the CPA population (Figure

), which is similar to the observations made by Gao and colleagues [
21] who characterised PA resistance in
M. truncatula. However, the CPA and PA findings contrast with BGA resistance characterised in
M. truncatula, where prior infestation with BGA on resistant lines showed a significant reduction in the population growth rate of a subsequent BGA infestation [
23].
The biology of CPA resistance in
M. truncatula SA30199 shares similarity with resistance to other aphid species in
M. truncatula as it involves a combination of antibiosis, antixenosis and tolerance and resistance is phloem based. All the major aphid resistance loci in
M. truncatula have been mapped to chromosome 3 in regions rich in open reading frames (ORFs) encoding nucleotide-binding-sites leucine-rich-repeats (NBS-LRRs). The three cloned aphid resistance genes identified to date; the
Mi gene to potato aphid (
Macrosiphum euphorbiae) in potato, the
Vat gene to cotton-melon aphid (
Aphis gossypii) in melon and the resistance gene to lettuce root aphid (
Pemphigus bursarius) in lettuce belong to the CC-NBS-LRR class of resistance genes [
14,
51,
52]. Furthermore, the
AIN locus, which explains 88% of the antibiosis resistance in
M. truncatula A17 to BGA and 23% of the antibiosis effect to PA, resides in a cluster of paralogous NBS-LRR genes [
25]. The major CPA antibiosis QTL was identified on the short arm of chromosome 2. The homologous region spanning the QTL on chromosome 2 in the reference genome of A17 was queried for the presence of NBS-LRR domains. This identified 9 Toll-like Interleukin 1 Receptor (TIR) and 5 CC-NBS-LRR domains respectively. This region is thus not as dense in, but does contain NBS-LRR domains. Further fine-mapping and subsequent cloning of this locus will elucidate whether the locus controlling CPA antibiosis belongs to the NBS-LRR class of aphid resistance genes.