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Genetic and physiological characterization of sunflower resistance provided by the wild-derived OrDeb2 gene against highly virulent races of Orobanche cumana Wallr

Authors :
Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España)
European Commission
l’Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (France)
Conferencia de Rectores de las Universidades Españolas
Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (España)
Fernández-Aparicio, Mónica
Moral, Lidia del
Muños, Stéphane
Velasco Varo, Leonardo
Pérez-Vich, Begoña
Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España)
European Commission
l’Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (France)
Conferencia de Rectores de las Universidades Españolas
Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (España)
Fernández-Aparicio, Mónica
Moral, Lidia del
Muños, Stéphane
Velasco Varo, Leonardo
Pérez-Vich, Begoña
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Sunflower broomrape is a holoparasitic angiosperm that parasitizes on sunflower roots, severely constraining crop yield. Breeding for resistance is the most effective method of control. OrDeb2 is a dominant resistance gene introgressed into cultivated sunflower from a wild-related species that confers resistance to highly virulent broomrape races. The objectives of this study were as follows: (i) locate OrDeb2 into the sunflower genome and determine putative candidate genes and (ii) characterize its underlying resistance mechanism. A segregating population from a cross between the sunflower resistant line DEB2, carrying OrDeb2, and a susceptible line was phenotyped for broomrape resistance in four experiments, including different environments and two broomrape races (FGV and GTK). This population was also densely genotyped with microsatellite and SNP markers, which allowed locating OrDeb2 within a 0.9 cM interval in the upper half of Chromosome 4. This interval corresponded to a 1.38 Mbp genomic region of the sunflower reference genome that contained a cluster of genes encoding LRR (leucine-rich repeat) receptor-like proteins lacking a cytoplasmic kinase domain and receptor-like kinases with one or two kinase domains and lacking an extracellular LRR region, which were valuable candidates for OrDeb2. Rhizotron and histological studies showed that OrDeb2 determines a post-attachment resistance response that blocks O. cumana development mainly at the cortex before the establishment of host-parasite vascular connections. This study will contribute to understand the interaction between crops and parasitic weeds, to establish durable breeding strategies based on genetic resistance and provide useful tools for marker-assisted selection and OrDeb2 map-based cloning.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1333187352
Document Type :
Electronic Resource