Development of molecular marker and introgression of Bph3 into elite rice cultivars by marker-assisted selection

Breed Sci. 2019 Mar;69(1):40-46. doi: 10.1270/jsbbs.18080. Epub 2019 Feb 20.

Abstract

The brown planthopper (BPH) is a serious insect pest of rice and a substantial threat to rice production. Identification of new BPH resistance genes and their transfer into modern rice cultivars are effective breeding approaches to reduce the damage caused by BPH. In this study, we mapped a BPH resistance gene to a 50-kb genomic interval between two InDel markers 4M03980 and 4M04041 on the short arm of chromosome 4 in indica rice cultivar BP60, where the BPH resistance gene was mapped in Rathu Heenati by Liu et al. (2015) and named "Bph3". This region contains two annotated genes Os04g0201900 and Os04g0202300, which encode lectin receptor kinases responsible for BPH resistance. We also developed a molecular marker "MM28T" for Bph3, and introgression Bph3 into susceptible rice restorer lines Guihui582 and Gui7571 by the marker-assisted selection (MAS) approach. The BPH resistance level is significantly enhanced in the Bph3-introgression lines, the resistance scores decrease from 8.2 to 3.6 for Guihui582 and decrease from 8.7 to around 3.8 for Gui7571. Therefore, developing molecular markers for the BPH resistance gene Bph3 and using them for molecular breeding will facilitate the creation of BPH-resistance rice cultivars to reduce damage caused by BPH.

Keywords: brown planthopper; fine mapping; molecular breeding; resistance gene.