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1.
Ninety-three F(1)-derived doubled haploid (DH) lines from a complex breeders' cross involving the Japanese genotype 'Chikurin Ibaraki 1', which is resistant to barley mild mosaic virus (BaMMV) and two strains of barley yellow mosaic virus (BaYMV and BaYMV-2), three susceptible varieties ('Hamu', 'Julia' and a breeding line) and cv. 'Carola', which carries rym4 conferring resistance to BaMMV and BaYMV, were analysed for resistance to BaMMV, BaYMV and BaYMV-2. The DH lines fell into four phenotypic classes. In addition to completely resistant and susceptible genotypes, DHs were observed which were either resistant to BaMMV and BaYMV or to BaYMV and BaYMV-2. For BaMMV and BaYMV-2 resistance, segregation ratios approaching 1r:1s were observed, suggesting the presence of single resistance genes. In contrast, the segregation ratio for BaYMV fits a 3r:1s segregation ratio, suggesting the presence of two independently inherited genes. From the genetic analysis, we conclude that a resistance locus effective against BaYMV and BaYMV-2 originates from Chikurin Ibaraki 1 and segregates independently from the Carola-derived rym4 resistance that is effective against BaYMV and BaMMV. The BaMMV resistance in Chikurin Ibaraki 1 has probably been lost during population development. This hypothesis was tested using a simple-sequence repeat (SSR) marker (Bmac29) linked to rym4. All BaMMV-resistant DH lines supported amplification of the rym4-resistance diagnostic allele. To identify the genetic location of the Chikurin Ibaraki 1-derived resistance against BaYMV/BaYMV-2, bulked DNA samples were constructed from the four resistance classes, and bulked segregant analysis was performed using a genome-wide collection of SSRs. Differentiating alleles were observed at two linked SSRs on chromosome 5H. The location of this BaYMV/BaYMV-2 resistance locus was confirmed and further resolved by linkage analysis on the whole population using a total of five linked SSRs.  相似文献   

2.
Soil-borne barley yellow mosaic virus disease – caused by a complex of at least three viruses, i.e. Barley mild mosaic virus (BaMMV), Barley yellow mosaic virus (BaYMV) and BaYMV-2 – is one of the most important diseases of winter barley in Europe. The two genes rym4, effective against BaMMV and BaYMV, and rym5, additionally effective against BaYMV-2, comprise a complex locus on chromosome 3HL, which is of special importance to European barley breeding. To provide the genetic basis for positional cloning of the Rym4/Rym5 locus, two high-resolution maps were constructed based on co-dominant flanking markers (MWG838/Y57c10 - MWG010/Bmac29). Mapping at a resolution of about 0.05% rec., rym4 has been located 1.07% recombination distal of marker MWG838 and 1.21% recombination proximal to marker MWG010. Based on a population size of 3,884 F2 plants (0.013% recombination) the interval harbouring rym5 was delimited to 1.49±0.14% recombination. By testing segmental recombinant inbred lines (RILs) for reaction to the different viruses at a resolution of 0.05% rec. (rym4) and 0.019% rec. (rym5), no segregation concerning the reaction to the different viruses could be observed. AFLP-based marker saturation for rym4, using 932 PstI+2/MseI+3 primer combinations only resulted in three markers with the closest one linked at 0.9% recombination to the gene. Two of these markers detected epialleles arising from the differential cytosine methylation of PstI sites. Regarding rym5, profiling of 1,200 RAPD primers (about 18,000 loci) and 2,048 EcoRI+3/MseI+3 AFLP primer combinations (about 205,000 loci) resulted in one RAPD marker and seven AFLP markers tightly linked to the resistance gene. Flanking markers with the closest linkage to rym5 (0.05% and 0.88% recombination) were converted into STS markers. These markers provide a starting point for chromosomal walking and may be exploited in marker-assisted selection for virus resistance based on rym5.  相似文献   

3.
Breeding for resistant cultivars is the only way to prevent high yield loss in barley caused by the soil-borne barley mild mosaic virus (BaMMV) complex. We have characterized the BaMMV resistance of barley cv. Chikurin Ibaraki 1. Doubled haploid lines were obtained from the F1 between the susceptible six-rowed winter barley cultivar, Plaisant, and Chikurin Ibaraki 1. Each line was tested for reaction to BaMMV by mechanical inoculation followed by DAS-ELISA. Of 44 microsatellites that covered the genome, 22 polymorphic markers were tested on one susceptible and one resistant bulk, each comprising 30 lines. Differential markers and additional microsatellite markers in the same region were then tested on the whole population. A bootstrap analysis was used to compute confidence intervals of distances and to test the orders of the resistance gene and the closest markers. A segregation of 84 resistant/98 susceptible lines fitted a 1:1 ratio (2=1.08, P=0.30), which corresponds to a single gene in this DH lines population. The resistance gene was flanked by two markers near the centromeric region of chromosome 6HS—Bmag0173, at 0.6±1.2 cM, and EBmac0874, at 5.8 ± 3.4 cM. We propose to name this new resistance gene rym15. This resistance gene and associated markers will increase the possibilities to breed efficiently for new cultivars resistant to the barley mosaic disease.Communicated by P. Langridge  相似文献   

4.
The soil-borne barley yellow mosaic virus disease (BaMMV, BaYMV, BaYMV-2) and the aphid-transmitted barley yellow dwarf virus (BYDV) are serious threats to winter barley cultivation. Resistance to barley yellow mosaic virus disease has been identified in extensive screening programmes and several recessive resistance genes have been mapped, e.g. rym4, rym5, rym9, rym11, rym13. In contrast to barley yellow mosaic virus disease, no complete resistance to BYDV is known in the barley gene pool, but tolerant accessions have been identified and QTL for BYDV-tolerance have been detected on chromosomes 2HL and 3HL. The use of resistance and tolerance in barley breeding can be considerably improved today by molecular markers (RFLPs, RAPDs, AFLPs, SSRs, STSs, SNPs), as they facilitate (i) efficient genotyping and estimation of genetic diversity; (ii) reliable selection on a single plant level independent of symptom expression in the field (iii) acceleration of back crossing procedures; (iv) pyramiding of resistance genes; (v) detection of QTL and marker-based combination of positive alleles; and (vi) isolation of resistance genes via map-based cloning.  相似文献   

5.

Key message

Based on a strategy combining extensive segregation analyses and tests for allelism with allele-specific re-sequencing an Hv-eIF4E allele exclusively effective against BaMMV was identified and closely linked markers for BaYMV resistance were developed.

Abstract

Soil-borne barley yellow mosaic disease is one of the most important diseases of winter barley. In extensive screenings for resistance, accession ‘HOR4224’ being resistant to three strains of Barley mild mosaic virus (BaMMV-ASL1, BaMMV-Sil, and BaMMV-Teik) and two strains of Barley yellow mosaic virus (BaYMV-1 and BaYMV-2) was identified. Analyses using Bmac29, being to some extent diagnostic for the rym4/5 locus, gave hint to the presence of the susceptibility-encoding allele at this locus. Therefore, 107 DH lines derived from the cross ‘HOR4224’ × ‘HOR10714’ (susceptible) were screened for resistance. Genetic analyses revealed an independent inheritance of resistance to BaMMV and BaYMV ( $\chi_{1:1:1:1}^{2}$  = 5.58) both encoded by a single gene (BaMMV $\chi_{1:1}^{2}$  = 0.477; BaYMV $\chi_{1:1}^{2}$  = 0.770). Although Bmac29 indicated the susceptibility-encoding allele, BaMMV resistance of ‘HOR4224’ co-localized with rym4/rym5. The BaYMV resistance was mapped to chromosome 5H in the region of rym3. Sequencing of full length cDNA of the Hv-eIF4E gene displayed an already sequenced allele described to be efficient against BaMMV and BaYMV. However, the F1 progenies of crosses involving ‘HOR4224’ and rym4/rym5 donors were all resistant to BaMMV but susceptible to BaYMV. Therefore, this is the first report of an allele at the rym4/rym5 locus exclusively efficient against BaMMV. Changes in the specificity are due to one non-synonymous amino acid substitution (I118K). Results obtained elucidate that combining extensive segregation analyses and tests for allelism involving different strains of BaMMV/BaYMV in combination with allele-specific re-sequencing is an efficient strategy for gene and allele detection in complex pathosystems.  相似文献   

6.
Soil-borne barley yellow mosaic virus disease, caused by different strains of Barley yellow mosaic virus (BaYMV) and Barley mild mosaic virus (BaMMV), is one of the most important diseases of winter barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) in Europe and East Asia. The recessive resistance gene rym11 located in the centromeric region of chromosome 4HL is effective against all so far known strains of BaMMV and BaYMV in Germany. In order to isolate this gene, a high-resolution mapping population (10,204 meiotic events) has been constructed. F2 plants were screened with co-dominant flanking markers and segmental recombinant inbred lines (RILs) were tested for resistance to BaMMV under growth chamber and field conditions. Tightly linked markers were developed by exploiting (1) publicly available barley EST sequences, (2) employing barley synteny to rice, Brachypodium distachyon and sorghum and (3) using next-generation sequencing data of barley. Using this approach, the genetic interval was efficiently narrowed down from the initial 10.72 % recombination to 0.074 % recombination. A marker co-segregating with rym11 was developed providing the basis for gene isolation and efficient marker-assisted selection.  相似文献   

7.
PK23-2, a line of six-rowed barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) originating from Pakistan, has resistance to Japanese strains I and III of the barley yellow mosaic virus (BaYMV). To identify the source of resistance in this line, reciprocal crosses were made between the susceptible cultivar Daisen-gold and PK23-2. Genetic analyses in the F1 generation, F2 generation, and a doubled haploid population (DH45) derived from the F1 revealed that PK23-2 harbors one dominant and one recessive resistance genes. A linkage map was constructed using 61 lines of DH45 and 127 DNA markers; this map covered 1268.8 cM in 10 linkage groups. One QTL having a LOD score of 4.07 and explaining 26.8% of the phenotypic variance explained (PVE) for resistance to BaYMV was detected at DNA marker ABG070 on chromosome 3H. Another QTL having a LOD score of 3.53 and PVE of 27.2% was located at marker Bmag0490 on chromosome 4H. The resistance gene on chromosome 3H, here named Rym17, showed dominant inheritance, whereas the gene on chromosome 4H, here named rym18, showed recessive inheritance in F1 populations derived from crosses between several resistant lines of DH45 and Daisen-gold. The BaYMV recessive resistance genes rym1, rym3, and rym5, found in Japanese barley germplasm, were not allelic to rym18. These results revealed that PK23-2 harbors two previously unidentified resistance genes, Rym17 on 3H and rym18 on 4H; Rym17 is the first dominant BaYMV resistance gene to be identified in primary gene pool. These new genes, particularly dominant Rym17, represent a potentially valuable genetic resource against BaYMV disease.  相似文献   

8.
 The genetic structure of the rym5 locus was studied in a population comprising 391 doubled-haploid lines that were evaluated for resistance to two strains of Barley Yellow Mosaic Virus (BaYMV-1, 2) and to Barley Mild Mosaic Virus (BaMMV). The absence of recombinants that are able to differentiate between the reaction to these different bymoviruses provides evidence that rym5 is a complex locus, which is either composed of several closely linked genes or of an allelic series of a single gene. For marker-assisted introgression of this locus into adapted barley germplasm, a CAPS (cleaved amplified polymorphic sequence) and a microsatellite marker were developed that flank the gene at distances of 0.8 and 1.3% recombination, respectively. Received: 19 June 1998 / Accepted: 24 July 1998  相似文献   

9.
In winter and early spring 2004 unequivocal mosaic symptoms were detected for the first time in Germany on six plants of the barley cv. ‘Tokyo’ carrying the resistance gene rym5. By serological and electron microscopic investigations Barley mild mosaic virus (BaMMV) was identified in all plants and could be re‐transmitted to cv. ‘Tokyo’ as well as to additional cultivars carrying rym5. In contrast to this, genotypes carrying the resistance genes rym1 + rym5, Rym2, rym4, rym7, rym9, rym11, rym12, rym13, Rym14Hb, rym15 or Rym16Hb turned out to be resistant. Furthermore, the BaMMV isolates were not transmissible to different dicotyledonous species. Sequence analyses in the VPg coding region of RNA1 revealed differences to the known sequence of the original BaMMV isolate (BaMMV‐ASL1, AJ 242725) and also of a French pathotype (BaMMV‐Sil, AJ 544267, AJ 544268) which is also able to overcome the resistance mediated by rym5. At least in one location a spread of the area infested by this new strain was observed in 2004/2005 and 2005/2006.  相似文献   

10.
Barley Yellow Mosaic Virus disease caused by different strains of BaYMV and BaMMV is a major threat to winter barley cultivation in Europe. Pyramiding of resistance genes may be considered as a promising strategy to avoid the selection of new virus strains and to create more durable resistances. However, this goal cannot be achieved by phenotypic selection due to the lack of differentiating virus strains. For pyramiding of resistance genes rym4, rym5, rym9 and rym11, located on chromosomes 3H and 4H of barley two different strategies have been developed. These strategies are based on doubled haploid lines (DHs) and marker assisted selection procedures. On the one hand F1 derived DH-plants of single crosses were screened by molecular markers for genotypes being homozygous recessive for both resistance genes. These genotypes were crossed to lines carrying one resistance gene in common and an additional third gene, leading to a DH-population of which 25% carry three resistance genes, 50% have two resistance genes and 25% possess a single resistance gene homozygous recessively. Alternatively, F1 plants having one resistance gene in common were directly inter-crossed [e.g. (rym4 × rym9) × (rym4 × rym11)] and about 100 seeds were produced per combination. Within these complex cross progenies plants were identified by markers being homozygous at the common resistance locus and heterozygous at the others. From such plants, theoretically present at a frequency of 6.25%, DH-lines were produced, which were screened for the presence of genotypes carrying three or two recessive resistance genes in a homozygous state. Besides DH-plants carrying all possible two-gene combinations, 20 DH-plants out of 107 analysed carrying rym4, rym9, and rym11 and 27 out of 187 tested carrying rym5, rym9, and rym11 homozygously have been detected using the second strategy which is faster but needs co-dominant markers, because in contrast to the first strategy marker selection is carried out on heterozygous genotypes.  相似文献   

11.

Key message

Unlocking allelic diversity of the bymovirus resistance gene rym11 located on proximal barley chromosome 4HL and diagnostic markers provides the basis for precision breeding for BaMMV/BaYMV resistance.

Abstract

The recessive resistance gene rym11 on barley chromosome 4HL confers broad-spectrum and complete resistance to all virulent European isolates of Barley mild mosaic virus and Barley yellow mosaic virus (BaMMV/BaYMV). As previously reported, rym11-based resistance is conferred by a series of alleles of naturally occurring deletions in the gene HvPDIL5-1, encoding a protein disulfide isomerase-like protein. Here, a novel resistance-conferring allele of rym11 is reported that, in contrast to previously identified resistance-conferring variants of the gene HvPDIL5-1, carries a single non-synonymous amino acid substitution. Allelism was confirmed by crossing to genotypes carrying previously known rym11 alleles. Crossing rym11 genotypes with a cultivar carrying the recessive resistance gene rym1, which was reported to reside on the same chromosome arm 4HL like rym11, revealed allelism of both loci. This allelic state was confirmed by re-sequencing HvPDIL5-1 in the rym1 genotype, detecting the haplotype of the rym11-d allele. Diagnostic PCR-based markers were established to differentiate all seven resistance-conferring alleles of the rym11 locus providing precise tools for marker-assisted selection (MAS) of rym11 in barley breeding.  相似文献   

12.
RFLP mapping of BaYMV resistance gene rym3 in barley (Hordeum vulgare)   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The rym3 (formerly designated ym3) gene conferring resistance to barley yellow mosaic virus (BaYMV) is effective against all strains of the virus but up to now has not been mapped to any chromosome. We performed a linkage analysis, using DNA extracted from individually harvested mature leaves of 153 F2 plants derived from a cross between BaYMV-resistant cv ’Ishuku Shirazu’ carrying rym3 and susceptible cv ’Ko A’. Additionally, the F3 lines derived from F2 plants were grown in the BaYMV-infested field and examined for their reaction to BaYMV. Our results indicated that rym3 is located on the short arm of chromosome 5H and flanked by RFLP markers MWG28and ABG705A at distances of 7.2 and 11.7 cM, respectively. The chromosomal configuration estimated by DNA markers around rym3 and the utilization of these molecular markers for pyramiding with the BaYMV resistance genes in barley breeding programs are discussed. Received: 24 August 1998 / Accepted: 30 January 1999<@head-com-p1a.lf>Communicated by F. Salamini  相似文献   

13.
 Thirty-six Hordeum vulgare varieties and 12 H. spontaneum germplasms originating from different parts of the world and showing different reactions to the barley yellow mosaic virus complex (BaMMV, BaYMV, BaYMV-2) were analyzed for genetic similarity using RAPDs. On the basis of an analysis of 20 selected RAPD-primers corresponding to 544 bands genetic similarity according to Nei and Li (1979) was estimated to be between 0.685 and 0.964. Associations between the 48 genotypes were calculated using UPGMA-clustering and principal coordinate analysis. By applying these methods we were able to separate H. spontaneum accessions from H. vulgare varieties, and within these groups all the genotypes were clustered correctly according to their origin. Consequently, RAPD analysis can be considered a very useful and efficient tool for the fast estimation of genetic relationships in barley. The correlation between genetic similarity with respect to German varieties and adaptation of exotic barley varieties to German growing conditions is discussed. Received: 21 May 1996 / Accepted: 5 July 1996  相似文献   

14.
Although a Chinese landrace of barley, Mokusekko 3, is completely resistant to all strains of Barley yellow mosaic virus (BaYMV) and Barley mild mosaic virus (BaMMV), and is known to have at least two resistant genes, rym1 and rym5, only rym5 has been utilized for BaYMV resistant barley breeding in Japan. In order to clarify the effect of rym1 on BaYMV and BaMMV, and to utilize the gene for resistant barley breeding, the susceptibilities of only rym1 carrying breeding lines against BaYMV and BaMMV were investigated. In the assessment of resistance to BaYMV-I, 341 F(2) populations derived from a cross between the resistant line Y4 with only rym1 and the susceptible cv Haruna Nijo shows that the segregation loosely fits a 1R:3S ratio (0.05 > P > 0.01), suggesting that the resistance is controlled by a single recessive gene, rym1. Further, none of the F(3) lines derived from the nine resistant F(2) plants showed any disease symptoms in the field infected by BaYMV-I. The same nine F(3) lines showed almost the same agronomic characters in the field infected by BaYMV-III as those in the uninfected field, apart from the symptom of showing numerous mosaics. This result indicates that the gene rym1 has an acceptable level of resistance to BaYMV-III. In the assessment of resistance to BaYMV-II, BaMMV-Ka1 and -Na1, an artificial infection method was adopted and the susceptibilities to those viruses were investigated. Although the control varieties, Ko A and Haruna Nijo, were infected with all of them, the rym1 gene carrying BC(2)F(3) lines were completely resistant to all strains. In summary, rym1 is completely resistant to BaYMV-I, -II, BaMMV-Ka1 and -Na1, and has an acceptable level of resistance to BaYMV-III. This study concludes with a discussion of the reason why the important resistance gene rym1 was eliminated along with resistant cultivars during breeding for resistance to BaYMV.  相似文献   

15.
Hordeum bulbosum represents the secondary gene pool of barley and constitutes a potential source of various disease resistances in barley breeding. Interspecific crosses of H. vulgare × H. bulbosum resulted in recombinant diploid-barley progeny with immunity to BaMMV after mechanical inoculation. Tests on fields contaminated with different viruses demonstrated that resistance was effective against all European viruses of the soil-borne virus complex (BaMMV, BaYMV-1, -2). Genetic analysis revealed that resistance was dominantly inherited. Marker analysis in a F5 mapping family was performed to map the introgression in the barley genome and to estimate its size after several rounds of recombination. RFLP anchor-marker alleles indicative of an H. bulbosum introgression were found to cover an interval 2.9 cM in length on chromosome 6HS. The soil-borne virus resistance locus harboured by this introgressed segment was designated Rym14Hb. For marker-assisted selection of Rym14Hb carriers, a diagnostic codominant STS marker was derived from an AFLP fragment amplified from leaf cDNA of homozygous-resistant genotypes inoculated with BaMMV.Communicated by F. Salamini  相似文献   

16.
Rym16 Hb , a gene conferring resistance to soil-borne viruses, was introgressed from Hordeum bulbosum to barley chromosome 2HL. Mechanical inoculation with BaMMV and field tests on a plot contaminated with different viruses demonstrated that Rym16 Hb is effective against all European viruses of the soil-borne virus complex (BaMMV, BaYMV-1, -2). Genetic analysis revealed a dominant inheritance of the resistance controlled by Rym16 Hb . Using 2HL anchor markers, the size of the introgression was estimated to be about 30 M. In its proximal part, the introgression was characterized by a rearrangement of markers Xbcd266, ABC153 and ABC252, accompanied with pronounced linkage drag by factor 4 in segregating mapping populations. The introgression was found to be associated with a recessive lethality factor, l Hb , which was closely linked to the markers mentioned above. Recombination occurring within the introgressed H. bulbosum segment allowed us to separate l Hb from Rym16 Hb and to reduce the size of the introgression to 23 cM or less.  相似文献   

17.
The Potyviridae are the largest family of plant-pathogenic viruses. Members of this family are the soil-borne bymoviruses barley yellow mosaic virus (BaYMV) and barley mild mosaic virus (BaMMV), which, upon infection of young winter barley seedlings in autumn, can cause yield losses as high as 50%. Resistance breeding plays a major role in coping with these pathogens. However, some viral strains have overcome the most widely used resistance. Thus, there is a need for novel sources of resistance. In ancient landraces and wild relatives of cultivated barley, alleles of the susceptibility factor PROTEIN DISULFIDE ISOMERASE LIKE 5–1 (PDIL5-1) were identified to confer resistance to all known strains of BaYMV and BaMMV. Although the gene is highly conserved throughout all eukaryotes, barley is thus far the only species for which PDIL5-1-based virus resistance has been reported. Whereas introgression by crossing to the European winter barley breeding pool is tedious, time-consuming and additionally associated with unwanted linkage drag, the present study exemplifies an approach to targeted mutagenesis of two barley cultivars employing CRISPR-associated endonuclease technology to induce site-directed mutations similar to those described for PDIL5-1 alleles that render certain landraces resistant. Homozygous primary mutants were produced in winter barley, and transgene-free homozygous M2 mutants were produced in spring barley. A variety of mutants carrying novel PDIL5-1 alleles were mechanically inoculated with BaMMV, by which all frameshift mutations and certain in-frame mutations were demonstrated to confer resistance to this virus. Under greenhouse conditions, virus-resistant mutants showed no adverse effects in terms of growth and yield.  相似文献   

18.
We present a detailed analysis of linkage disequilibrium (LD) in the physical and genetic context of the barley gene Hv-eIF4E, which confers resistance to the barley yellow mosaic virus (BYMV) complex. Eighty-three SNPs distributed over 132 kb of Hv-eIF4E and six additional fragments genetically mapped to its flanking region were used to derive haplotypes from 131 accessions. Three haplogroups were recognized, discriminating between the alleles rym4 and rym5, which each encode for a spectrum of resistance to BYMV. With increasing map distance, haplotypes of susceptible genotypes displayed diverse patterns driven mainly by recombination, whereas haplotype diversity within the subgroups of resistant genotypes was limited. We conclude that the breakdown of LD within 1 cM of the resistance gene was generated mainly by susceptible genotypes. Despite the LD decay, a significant association between haplotype and resistance to BYMV was detected up to a distance of 5.5 cM from the resistance gene. The LD pattern and the haplotype structure of the target chromosomal region are the result of interplay between low recombination and recent breeding history.  相似文献   

19.
Genomic sequence AY661558, representing a part of the BAC contig of the Rym4/Rym5 locus conferring resistance to the barley yellow mosaic virus complex (BaMMV/BaYMV), was exploited in order to develop SSR markers for practical barley breeding. Out of 57 SSR motifs found within this sequence, primers were designed and tested for the 5 SSRs with the highest repeat length. The polymorphic SSR marker QLB1 co-segregated with rym4 and rym5 phenotypes in respective high-resolution mapping populations developed for the construction of the original BAC contig. The primers targeted 2 sites located 756 bp and 5173 bp downstream of the translation initiation factor 4E (Hv-eIF4E). Physical linkage of the QLB1 marker to the Rym4/Rym5 locus was confirmed experimentally on Morex BAC 519J14, a seed BAC of Hv-eIF4E, and BAC 801A11, which is located proximally to Hv-eIF4E. QLB1 revealed 7 alleles in a set of 100 winter barley lines and cultivars. Five alleles were found within 673 advanced breeding lines derived from applied Polish winter barley breeding programmes, which corresponds to a PIC value of 0.684. No recombinants between Rym4/5 and QLB1 were detected, suggesting that QLB1 can be used efficiently in marker-assisted selection of the Hv-eIF4E-mediated bymovirus resistance.  相似文献   

20.
Barley yellow mosaic virus (BaYMV) is the causal agent of a soil-borne systemic mosaic disease on barley. It has been reported in Belgium since the 1980s. The control of this disease is managed almost exclusively through the use of resistant varieties. The resistance of most commercial barley cultivars grown in Europe is conferred mainly by a single recessive gene, rym4. This monogenic resistance provides immunity against BaYMV pathotype 1 and has been mapped on barley chromosome 3HL and shown to be caused by mutations in the translation initiation factor eIF4E. Another pathotype, BaYMV pathotype 2, which appeared in the late 1980s (in Belgium, in the early 1990s), is able to overcome the rym4-controlled resistance. Until recently, this pathotype remained confined to specific locations. During a systematic survey in 2003, mosaic symptoms were observed only on susceptible barley cultivars collected in Belgian fields. BaYMV was detected by ELISA and RT-PCR on the susceptible cultivars and only by RT-PCR on the resistant cultivars. In 2004, mosaic symptoms were observed on susceptible and resistant cultivars. BaYMV was detected by ELISA and RT-PCR on both cultivars. In addition to developing RT-PCR methods for detecting and identifying BaYMV and Barley mild mosaic virus (BaMMV), an RT-PCR targeting the VPg/NIa viral protein part of the genome, known to discriminate the two BaYMV pathotypes, was set up to accurately identify the pathotype(s) now present in Belgium. The sequences from the generated amplicons revealed the single nucleotide substitution resulting in an amino acid change from lysine to asparagine specific to BaYMV pathotype 2. The possible reasons for the change in the BaYMV pathotype situation in Belgium, such as climatic change or a progressive build-up of soil inoculum potential, will be discussed, as well as the use of eIF4E-based resistance.  相似文献   

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