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The Mla (Powdery Mildew) Resistance Cluster Is Associated With Three NBS-LRR Gene Families and Suppressed Recombination Within a 240-kb DNA Interval on Chromosome 5S (1HS) of Barley

Authors :
Dario Leister
Shaun Morroll
Rod A. Wing
Fusheng Wei
Roger P. Wise
Paul Schulze-Lefert
Joachim Kurth
Long Mao
Karin Gobelman-Werner
Source :
Scopus-Elsevier, ResearcherID
Publication Year :
1999
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 1999.

Abstract

Powdery mildew of barley, caused by Erysiphe graminis f. sp. hordei, is a model system for investigating the mechanism of gene-for-gene interaction between large-genome cereals and obligate-fungal pathogens. A large number of loci that confer resistance to this disease are located on the short arm of chromosome 5(1H). The Mla resistance-gene cluster is positioned near the telomeric end of this chromosome arm. AFLP-, RAPD-, and RFLP-derived markers were used to saturate the Mla region in a high-resolution recombinant population segregating for the (Mla6 + Mla14) and (Mla13 + Ml-Ru3) resistance specificities. These tightly linked genetic markers were used to identify and develop a physical contig of YAC and BAC clones spanning the Mla cluster. Three distinct NBS-LRR resistance-gene homologue (RGH) families were revealed via computational analysis of low-pass and BAC-end sequence data derived from Mla-spanning clones. Genetic and physical mapping delimited the Mla-associated, NBS-LRR gene families to a 240-kb interval. Recombination within the RGH families was at least 10-fold less frequent than between markers directly adjacent to the Mla cluster.

Details

ISSN :
19432631
Volume :
153
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Genetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fbda1fdd4b1f4861b27c0d8d78b9e7a7
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/genetics/153.4.1929