Mapping QTL for Adult-Plant Resistance to Stripe Rust in a Chinese Wheat Landrace

Int J Mol Sci. 2022 Aug 26;23(17):9662. doi: 10.3390/ijms23179662.

Abstract

Wheat stripe (yellow) rust is a worldwide disease that seriously reduces wheat grain yield and quality. Adult-plant resistance (APR) to stripe rust is generally more durable but usually controlled by multiple genes with partial resistance. In this study, a recombinant inbred line population was developed from a cross between a Chinese wheat landrace, Tutoumai, with APR to stripe rust, and a highly susceptible wheat cultivar, Siyang 936. The population was genotyped by genotyping-by-sequencing and phenotyped for APR to stripe rust in four consecutive field experiments. Three QTLs, QYr.sdau-1BL, QYr.sdau-5BL, and QYr.sdau-6BL, were identified for APR to stripe rust, and explained 8.0-21.2%, 10.1-22.7%, and 11.6-18.0% of the phenotypic variation, respectively. QYr.sdau-1BL was further mapped to a 21.6 Mb region using KASP markers derived from SNPs identified by RNA-seq of the two parents. In the QYr.sdau-1BL region, 13 disease-resistance-related genes were differently expressed between the two parents, and therefore were considered as the putative candidates of QYr.sdau-1BL. This study provides favorable gene/QTL and high-throughput markers to breeding programs for marker-assisted selection of the wheat stripe rust APR genes.

Keywords: KASP; adult plant resistance; candidate gene; stripe rust; wheat.

MeSH terms

  • Basidiomycota* / genetics
  • China
  • Chromosome Mapping
  • Disease Resistance / genetics
  • Plant Breeding
  • Plant Diseases / genetics
  • Triticum* / genetics