Accelerated wheat development and deployment of high-yielding, climate resilient, and disease resistant cultivars can contribute to enhanced food security and sustainable intensification. To facilitate gene discovery, we assembled an association mapping panel of 528 spring wheat landraces of diverse geographic origin for a genome-wide association study (GWAS). All accessions were genotyped using an Illumina Infinium 9K wheat single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) chip and 4781 polymorphic SNPs were used for analysis. To identify loci underlying resistance to the major leaf spot diseases and to better understand the genomic patterns, we quantified population structure, allelic diversity, and linkage disequilibrium. Our results showed 32 loci were significantly associated with resistance to the major leaf spot diseases. Further analysis identified QTL effective against major leaf spot diseases of wheat which appeared to be novel and others that were previously identified by association analysis using Diversity Arrays Technology (DArT) and bi-parental mapping. In addition, several identified SNPs co-localized with genes that have been implicated in plant disease resistance. Future work could aim to select the putative novel loci and pyramid them in locally adapted wheat cultivars to develop broad-spectrum resistance to multiple leaf spot diseases of wheat via marker-assisted selection (MAS).
Assessment of variability of Ascochyta rabiei (teleomorph: Didymella rabiei) was based on virulence tests of 40 isolates and on random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) analysis of 39 isolates from Canada. In addition, isolates of A. rabiei from other countries were assessed in the virulence (18 isolates) and RAPD (20 isolates) analyses. Seven isolates of A. lentis (teleo-morph: Didymella lentis) and two of A. pinodes (teleomorph: Mycosphaerella pinodes) also were included in the RAPD analysis. Significant line-isolate interactions in the virulence tests indicated that certain isolates were virulent only on certain lines. Canadian isolates were grouped into 14 pathotypes using eight chickpea differentials. These groupings also encompassed 17 of the 18 isolates from other countries. RAPD analysis of all 68 isolates using 8 primers produced 112 fragments, of which 96% were polymorphic. Similarities among A. rabiei isolates from Canada ranged from 20 to 100%. In the RAPD dendrogram, all five A. rabiei isolates from Australia, three of six from Syria, three of five from the United States, and one of two from India clustered within the major groups of Canadian isolates. There was a weak association between RAPD and pathotype groups. A. rabiei was 45% similar to A. lentis and only 14% similar to A. pinodes. The levels of DNA variability and virulence among isolates show that the population of A. rabiei in Canada is highly diverse.
Tan spot, caused by Pyrenophora tritici-repentis, is an important foliar disease of wheat (Triticum aestivum) worldwide. In a preliminary study, P. tritici-repentis isolates from Arkansas were shown to vary in virulence relative to isolates from other regions of the United States. Therefore, the aim of the current study was to characterize both pathogenic and molecular variations in P. tritici-repentis isolates from Arkansas. The virulence of 93 isolates of P. tritici-repentis was evaluated by inoculating five differential wheat cultivars/lines. Based on virulence phenotypes, 63 isolates were classified as race 1, and 30 isolates were assigned to race 3. A subset of 42 isolates was selected for molecular characterization with the presence or absence of the ToxA and ToxB genes. The results showed that 36 isolates out of 42 tested by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and Southern analysis lacked the ToxA and ToxB genes. Six isolates harboring the ToxA and ToxB genes induced necrosis and chlorosis on Glenlea and 6B365, respectively. Thirteen ToxA gene-deficient isolates also caused necrosis and chlorosis on Glenlea and 6B365, respectively; however, they did not fit current race classification. In contrast, the remaining 23 ToxA gene-deficient isolates did not cause necrosis, but induced chlorosis on 6B365, showing a disease profile for race 3. When the virulence of AR LonB2 (an isolate with unclassified race) was compared with known races 1, 3, and 5 of P. tritici-repentis on 20 winter wheat cultivars from Arkansas, the virulence phenotypes differed substantially. Taken together, the ToxA and ToxB gene-deficient isolates of P. tritici-repentis that induce necrosis and/or chlorosis may produce a novel toxin(s) on wheat.
Septoria tritici leaf blotch (STB), caused by the ascomycete Mycosphaerella graminicola (anamorph Septoria tritici), is an economically important disease of wheat. Breeding for resistance to STB is the most effective means to control this disease and can be facilitated through the use of molecular markers. However, molecular markers linked to most genes for resistance to STB are not yet available. This study was conducted to test for resistance in the parents of a standard wheat mapping population and to map any resistance genes identified. The population consisted of 130 F(10) recombinant-inbred lines (RILs) from a cross between the synthetic hexaploid wheat W7984 and cv. Opata 85. Genetic analysis indicated that a single major gene controls resistance to M. graminicola in this population. This putative resistance gene is now designated Stb8 and was mapped with respect to amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) and microsatellite markers. An AFLP marker, EcoRI-ACG/MseI-CAG5, was linked in repulsion with the resistance gene at a distance of approximately 5.3 centimorgans (cM). Two flanking microsatellite markers, Xgwm146 and Xgwm577, were linked to the Stb8 gene on the long arm of wheat chromosome 7B at distances of 3.5 and 5.3 cM, respectively. The microsatellite markers identified in this study have potential for use in marker-assisted selection in breeding programs and for pyramiding of Stb8 with other genes for resistance to M. graminicola in wheat.
Restriction fragment length polymorphism and virulence analyses were used to evaluate the population structure of Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzae, the rice bacterial blight pathogen, from several rice-growing countries in Asia. Two DNA sequences from X. oryzae pv. oryzae, IS1112, an insertion sequence, and avrXa10, a member of a family of avirulence genes, were used as probes to analyze the genomes of 308 strains of X. oryzae pv. oryzae collected from China, India, Indonesia, Korea, Malaysia, Nepal, and the Philippines. On the basis of the consensus of three clustering statistics, the collection formed five clusters. Genetic distances within the five clusters ranged from 0.16 to 0.51, and distances between clusters ranged from 0.48 to 0.64. Three of the five clusters consisted of strains from a single country. Strains within two clusters, however, were found in more than one country, suggesting patterns of movement of the pathogen. The pathotype of X. oryzae pv. oryzae was determined for 226 strains by inoculating five rice differential cultivars. More than one pathotype was associated with each cluster; however, some pathotypes were associated with only one cluster. Most strains from South Asia (Nepal and India) were virulent to cultivars containing the bacterial blight resistance gene xa-5, while most strains from other countries were avirulent to xa-5. The regional differentiation of clusters of X. oryzae pv. oryzae in Asia and the association of some pathotypes of X. oryzae pv. oryzae with single clusters suggested that strategies that target regional resistance breeding and gene deployment are feasible.
Tan spot, caused by an ascomycete fungus Pyrenophora tritici-repentis, is one of the most devastating foliar diseases of wheat. This fungus induces two distinct symptoms, tan necrosis and extensive chlorosis, on susceptible wheat cultivars. Besides causing average yield losses of 5-10%, tan spot also causes significant losses in grain quality by grain shriveling, red smudge, and black point. Conservation agriculture in combination with wheat monoculture involving cultivation of susceptible cultivars has resulted in frequent onset of tan spot epidemics worldwide. Development of new resistant wheat cultivars, in conjunction with crop rotation, will provide an effective, economical, and environmentally safe means of controlling tan spot. Presently, eight races of P. tritici-repentis have been identified worldwide based on the ability to induce necrosis and chlorosis symptoms on a set of differential wheat cultivars. P. tritici-repentis is a homothallic fungus having both sexual and asexual reproduction resulting in high genetic diversity worldwide. Both quantitative and qualitative mode of inheritance for resistance to tan spot of wheat has been reported. The tan spot fungus produces multiple host-specific toxins and host resistance is highly correlated to insensitivity to toxins. Genetic studies have further confirmed that wheat-P. tritici-repentis follows the toxin model of gene-for-gene hypothesis although other mechanism of host-pathogen interaction may exist and exploitation of all resistance phenomenon is to be adopted to develop durable resistant cultivars.
Sources of resistance to Fusarium head blight (FHB) in wheat are mostly restricted to Chinese hexaploid genotypes. The effort to incorporate the resistance from hexaploid wheat or wild relatives to cultivated durum wheat (Triticum turgidum L. var. durum Desf.) have not been successful in providing resistance to the level of the donor parents. In this study, we used 171 BC1F6 and 169 BC1F7 lines derived from crossing of four Tunisian tetraploid sources of resistance (Tun7, Tun18, Tun34, Tun36) with durum cultivars ‘Ben,’ ‘Maier,’ ‘Lebsock,’ and ‘Mountrail’ for association studies. The Tun18 and Tun7 FHB resistances were found to be comparable to the best hexaploid wheat sources. A new significant QTL for FHB resistance was identified on the long arm of chromosome 5B (Qfhs.ndsu-5BL) with both association and classical QTL mapping analysis. Linkage disequilibrium (LD) blocks extending up to 40 cM were evident in these populations. The linear mixed model considering the structure (Q or P) and the kinship matrix (KT) estimated by restricted maximum likelihood (REML) was identified as the best for association studies in a mixture of wheat populations from a breeding program. The results of association mapping analysis also demonstrated a region on the short arm of chromosome 3B as potentially linked to FHB resistance. This region is in proximity of major FHB resistance gene fhb1 reported in hexaploid wheat. A possibility of having susceptibility or suppressor of resistance gene(s) on durum wheat chromosome 2A was further confirmed in this material, explaining the problem in developing resistant genotypes without counter selection against this region.
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