The Plant Genome (Mar 2019)

A High-Resolution Map of Wheat QYr.ucw-1BL, an Adult Plant Stripe Rust Resistance Locus in the Same Chromosomal Region as Yr29

  • Nicolas Cobo,
  • Humphrey Wanjugi,
  • Evans Lagudah,
  • Jorge Dubcovsky

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3835/plantgenome2018.08.0055
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1

Abstract

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The appearance of highly virulent and more aggressive races of f. sp. () during the last two decades has led to stripe rust epidemics worldwide and to the rapid erosion of effective resistance genes. In this study, we mapped an adult-plant resistance locus from the Argentinean wheat ( L.) cultivar Klein Chajá, which is effective against these new races. By using wheat exome capture data and a large population of 2480 segregating plants (4960 gametes), we mapped within a 0.24-cM region [332 kb in International Wheat Genome Sequencing Consortium (IWGSC) RefSeq version 1.0] on chromosome arm 1BL. This region overlaps with current maps of the adult-plant resistance gene , which has remained effective for more than 60 yr. An allelism test failed to find recombination between and and yielded similar resistance phenotypes for the two loci. These results, together with similar haplotypes in the candidate region, suggested that and might represent the same gene. However, we cannot rule out the possibility of tightly linked but different genes because most of the 13 genes in the candidate region are annotated with functions associated with disease resistance. To evaluate their potential as candidate genes, we characterized their polymorphisms between resistant and susceptible haplotypes. Finally, we used these polymorphisms to develop high-throughput markers to accelerate the deployment of these resistance loci in wheat breeding programs.