1. Quantitative resistance to late blight from Solanum berthaultii cosegregates with R(Pi-ber): insights in stability through isolates and environment.
- Author
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Rauscher G, Simko I, Mayton H, Bonierbale M, Smart CD, Grünwald NJ, Greenland A, and Fry WE
- Subjects
- Alleles, Chromosome Mapping, Chromosomes, Plant genetics, Crosses, Genetic, Environment, Phenotype, Plant Diseases genetics, Plant Diseases microbiology, Solanum immunology, Chromosome Segregation genetics, Genes, Plant genetics, Immunity, Innate genetics, Phytophthora isolation & purification, Phytophthora physiology, Plant Diseases immunology, Solanum genetics, Solanum microbiology
- Abstract
Genetic resistance is a valuable tool in the fight against late blight of potatoes but little is known about the stability and specificity of quantitative resistance including the effect of defeated major resistance genes. In the present study we investigated the effect of different isolates of Phytophthora infestans on the mode of action of R(Pi-ber), an R-gene originating from Solanum berthaultii. The experiments were conducted on progenies derived from two reciprocal inter-specific backcrosses of Solanum tuberosum and S. berthaultii. The plant-pathogen interaction was tested in diverse environments including field, greenhouse and growth chamber conditions. The R(Pi-ber) gene provided complete resistance against a US8 isolate of P. infestans in all trials. When isolates compatible with R(Pi-ber) were used for inoculation, a smaller, but significant resistance effect was consistently detected in the same map position as the R-gene. This indicates that this R-gene provides a residual resistance effect, and/or that additional resistance loci are located in this genomic region of chromosome X. Additional quantitative resistance loci (QRL) were identified in the analyzed progenies. While some of the QRL (such as those near TG130 on chromosome III) were effective against several isolates of the pathogen, others were isolate specific. With a single exception, the S. berthaultii alleles were associated with a decrease in disease severity. Resistance loci reported in the present study co-locate with previously reported R-genes and QRL to P. infestans and other pathogens.
- Published
- 2010
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