Characterization and Genetic Mapping of Black Root Rot Resistance in Gossypium arboreum L

Int J Mol Sci. 2021 Mar 5;22(5):2642. doi: 10.3390/ijms22052642.

Abstract

Black root rot (BRR) is an economically important disease of cotton and other crops, especially in cooler regions with short growing seasons. Symptoms include black discoloration of the roots, reduced number of lateral roots and stunted or slow plant growth. The cultivated tetraploid Gossypium species are susceptible to BRR. Resistance to BRR was identified in G. arboreum accession BM13H and is associated with reduced and restricted hyphal growth and less sporulation. Transcriptome analysis indicates that BM13H responds to infection at early time points 2- and 3-days post-inoculation, but by day 5, few differentially expressed genes are observed between infected and uninfected roots. Inheritance of BM13H resistance to BRR was evaluated in an F6 recombinant inbred population and shows a single semi-dominant locus conferring resistance that was fine mapped to a region on chromosome 1, containing ten genes including five putative resistance-like genes.

Keywords: Berkleyomyces rouxiae; Gossypium arboreum; Thielaviopsis basicola; asiatic cotton; black root rot; disease resistance; transcriptome analysis.

MeSH terms

  • Ascomycota / metabolism*
  • Chromosome Mapping*
  • Disease Resistance / genetics*
  • Gene Expression Regulation, Plant
  • Gossypium* / genetics
  • Gossypium* / metabolism
  • Gossypium* / microbiology
  • Plant Diseases* / genetics
  • Plant Diseases* / microbiology
  • Plant Roots* / genetics
  • Plant Roots* / metabolism
  • Plant Roots* / microbiology
  • Tetraploidy