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Yr60, a Gene Conferring Moderate Resistance to Stripe Rust in Wheat

Authors :
Caixia Lan
Urmil Bansal
Evans Lagudah
V. Calvo-Salazar
S. A. Herrera-Foessel
Harbans Bariana
Julio Huerta-Espino
Ravi P. Singh
Source :
Plant Disease. 99:508-511
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Scientific Societies, 2015.

Abstract

Stripe rust, caused by Puccinia striiformis f. sp. tritici W., is a devastating disease of wheat worldwide. A new stripe rust resistance gene with moderate seedling and adult plant resistance was mapped using an F5 recombinant inbred line (RIL) population developed from the cross of the resistant parent ‘Almop’ with the susceptible parent ‘Avocet’. The parents and RILs were phenotyped for seedling stripe rust response variation in a greenhouse and in field trials at Toluca, Mexico for 2 years. Almop showed moderate levels of resistance at both seedling and adult plant stages compared with the highly susceptible response of Avocet. The distribution of homozygous resistant, homozygous susceptible, and segregating RILs conformed to segregation at a single locus. Seedlings and adult plant responses were correlated, indicating that the same gene conferred resistance at both stages. A bulk segregant analysis approach with widely distributed simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers mapped the resistance gene to the distal region of the long arm of chromosome 4A. The SSR marker wmc776 cosegregated with this gene, whereas markers wmc219 and wmc313 were tightly linked and both located at 0.6 centimorgans. The resistance locus was designated Yr60.

Details

ISSN :
19437692 and 01912917
Volume :
99
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Plant Disease
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4452e58764aeeb2e04926150d93fa4bb