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Novel Fusarium wilt resistance genes uncovered in natural and cultivated strawberry populations are found on three non-homoeologous chromosomes

Authors :
Dominique D. A. Pincot
Mitchell J. Feldmann
Michael A. Hardigan
Mishi V. Vachev
Peter M. Henry
Thomas R. Gordon
Marta Bjornson
Alan Rodriguez
Nicolas Cobo
Randi A. Famula
Glenn S. Cole
Gitta L. Coaker
Steven J. Knapp
Source :
TAG. Theoretical and applied genetics. Theoretische und angewandte Genetik, vol 135, iss 6
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Key Message Several Fusarium wilt resistance genes were discovered, genetically and physically mapped, and rapidly deployed via marker-assisted selection to develop cultivars resistant toFusarium oxysporumf. sp.fragariae, a devastating soil-borne pathogen of strawberry. Abstract Fusarium wilt, a soilborne disease caused by Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. fragariae, poses a significant threat to strawberry (Fragaria$$\times$$ × ananassa) production in many parts of the world. This pathogen causes wilting, collapse, and death in susceptible genotypes. We previously identified a dominant gene (FW1) on chromosome 2B that confers resistance to race 1 of the pathogen, and hypothesized that gene-for-gene resistance to Fusarium wilt was widespread in strawberry. To explore this, a genetically diverse collection of heirloom and modern cultivars and octoploid ecotypes were screened for resistance to Fusarium wilt races 1 and 2. Here, we show that resistance to both races is widespread in natural and domesticated populations and that resistance to race 1 is conferred by partially to completely dominant alleles among loci (FW1, FW2, FW3, FW4, and FW5) found on three non-homoeologous chromosomes (1A, 2B, and 6B). The underlying genes have not yet been cloned and functionally characterized; however, plausible candidates were identified that encode pattern recognition receptors or other proteins known to confer gene-for-gene resistance in plants. High-throughput genotyping assays for SNPs in linkage disequilibrium with FW1-FW5 were developed to facilitate marker-assisted selection and accelerate the development of race 1 resistant cultivars. This study laid the foundation for identifying the genes encoded by FW1-FW5, in addition to exploring the genetics of resistance to race 2 and other races of the pathogen, as a precaution to averting a Fusarium wilt pandemic.

Details

ISSN :
14322242
Volume :
135
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
TAG. Theoretical and applied genetics. Theoretische und angewandte Genetik
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....07cedb7c2790c467fd3c677f85fdb7ef