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1.
Brown planthopper (BPH) is one of the most destructive insect pests of rice. Wild species of rice are a valuable source of resistance genes for developing resistant cultivars. A molecular marker-based genetic analysis of BPH resistance was conducted using an F2 population derived from a cross between an introgression line, ‘IR71033-121-15’, from Oryza minuta (Accession number 101141) and a susceptible Korean japonica variety, ‘Junambyeo’. Resistance to BPH (biotype 1) was evaluated using 190 F3 families. Two major quantitative trait loci (QTLs) and two significant digenic epistatic interactions between marker intervals were identified for BPH resistance. One QTL was mapped to 193.4-kb region located on the short arm of chromosome 4, and the other QTL was mapped to a 194.0-kb region on the long arm of chromosome 12. The two QTLs additively increased the resistance to BPH. Markers co-segregating with the two resistance QTLs were developed at each locus. Comparing the physical map positions of the two QTLs with previously reported BPH resistance genes, we conclude that these major QTLs are new BPH resistance loci and have designated them as Bph20(t) on chromosome 4 and Bph21(t) on chromosome 12. This is the first report of BPH resistance genes from the wild species O. minuta. These two new genes and markers reported here will be useful to rice breeding programs interested in new sources of BPH resistance.  相似文献   

2.
Tan GX  Weng QM  Ren X  Huang Z  Zhu LL  He GC 《Heredity》2004,92(3):212-217
The whitebacked planthopper (WBPH), Sogatella furcifera, and brown planthopper (BPH) Nilaparvata lugens St?l are important sucking insects of rice (Oryza sativa L.) crops throughout the world. Rice 'B5', which has derived its resistance genes from the wild rice O. officinalis Wall ex Watt, is a line that is highly resistant to both WBPH and BPH. Previously, two resistance genes against BPH, Qbp1, and Qbp2 in 'B5' had been mapped onto chromosome 3 and chromosome 4, respectively. In this study, we employed a mapping population composed of 187 recombinant inbred lines (RILs), produced from a cross between 'B5' and susceptible variety 'Minghui63', to locate the WBPH and BPH resistance genes. A RFLP survey of the bulked extremes from the RIL population identified two genomic regions, one on chromosome 3 and the other on chromosome 4, likely containing the resistance genes to planthoppers. QTL analysis of the RILs further confirmed that two WBPH resistance genes were mapped on the same loci as Qbp1 and Qbp2, using a linkage map with 242 molecular markers distributed on 12 rice chromosomes. Of the two WBPH resistance genes, one designated Wbph7(t) was located within a 1.1-cM region between R1925 and G1318 on chromosome 3, the other designated Wbph8(t) was within a 0.3-cM region flanked by R288 and S11182 on chromosome 4. A two-way analysis of variance showed that two loci acted independently with each other in determining WBPH resistance. The results have significant implications in studying the interactions between sucking insects and plants and in breeding programs of resistance to rice planthoppers.  相似文献   

3.
 We used graphical genotyping and linkage analyses with molecular markers to determine the chromosomal location of the rice stripe disease resistance gene, Stv-b i . The stripe resistance gene from the indica rice (Oryza sativa) cv ‘Modan’ was introgressed into several Japanese rice varieties. We found 4 RFLP markers in ‘Modan’, five susceptible parental rice varieties (‘Norin No. 8’, ‘Sachihikari’, ‘Kanto No. 98’, ‘Hokuriku No.103’ and ‘Koganebare’) and four resistant progeny varieties (‘St. No. 1’, ‘Aichi No. 6’, ‘Aoisora’ and ‘Asanohikari’). Graphical genotyping of the resistant progeny revealed a chromosomal segment ascribable to ‘Modan’ and associated with stripe resistance. The chromosomal segment from ‘Modan’ was located at 35.85 cM on chromosome 11. Linkage analysis using 120 F2 individuals from a cross between ‘Koshihikari’ (susceptible) and ‘Asanohikari’ (resistant) revealed another 8 RFLP markers in the same chromosome. We performed a bioassay for rice stripe resistance in F3 lines of the F2 individuals using infective small brown planthoppers and identified an 1.8-cM segment harboring the rice stripe disease resistance gene, Stv-b i , between XNpb220 and XNpb257/ XNpb254. Furthermore, Stv-b i was linked by 0.0 cM to a RFLP marker, ST10, which was developed on the basis of the results of RAPD analysis. These DNA markers near the Stv-b i locus may be useful in marker-assisted selection and map-based cloning of the Stv-b i gene. Received: 26 September 1997 / Accepted: 4 November 1997  相似文献   

4.
The brown planthopper (Nilaparvata lugens Stål; BPH) is one of the most serious rice pests worldwide. Growing resistant varieties is the most effective way to manage this insect, and wild rice species are a valuable source of resistance genes for developing resistant cultivars. BPH27 derived from an accession of Guangxi wild rice, Oryza rufipogon Griff. (Accession no. 2183, hereafter named GX2183), was primarily mapped to a 17-cM region on the long arm of the chromosome four. In this study, fine mapping of BPH27 was conducted using two BC1F2 populations derived from introgression lines of GX2183. Insect resistance was evaluated in the BC1F2 populations with 6,010 individual offsprings, and 346 resistance extremes were obtained and employed for fine mapping of BPH27. High-resolution linkage analysis defined the BPH27 locus to an 86.3-kb region in Nipponbare. Regarding the sequence information of rice cultivars, Nipponbare and 93-11, all predicted open reading frames (ORFs) in the fine-mapping region have been annotated as 11 types of proteins, and three ORFs encode disease-related proteins. Moreover, the average BPH numbers showed significant differences in 96–120 h after release in comparisons between the preliminary near-isogenic lines (pre-NILs, lines harboring resistance genes) and BaiR54. BPH growth and development were inhibited and survival rates were lower in the pre-NIL plants compared with the recurrent parent BaiR54. The pre-NIL exhibited 50.7 % reductions in population growth rates (PGR) compared to BaiR54. The new development in fine mapping of BPH27 will facilitate the efforts to clone this important resistant gene and to use it in BPH-resistance rice breeding.  相似文献   

5.
The PM687 line of Capsicum annuum L. has a single dominant gene, Me 3 , that confers heat-stable resistance to root-knot nematodes (RKN). Me 3 was mapped using doubled-haploid (DH) lines and F2 progeny from a cross between the susceptible cultivar ’Yolo Wonder’ (’YW’) and the highly resistant line ’PM687’. Bulked-segregant analysis with DNA pools, from susceptible or resistant DH lines, was performed to identify RAPD and AFLP markers linked to Me 3 . There was no polymorphism between bulks of ten DH lines using over 800 RADP primers (4,000 amplified fragments analysed). Using 512 AFLP primers (74,000 amplified fragments analysed), and bulked DNA templates from 20 resistant and 20 susceptible plants, we identified eight repulsion-phase and four coupling-phase markers linked to Me 3. Analysed in 103 DH progeny, they defined a 56.1-cM interval containing the target gene. The nearest were located 0.5, 1.0, 1.5 and 3.0 centimorgans (cM) on both sides of the gene. Analysis of the F2 progeny (162 plants) with the nearest coupling-phase marker confirmed its close position. Another resistance gene to RKN, present in ’PM687’ (Me 4 ), was shown to be linked to Me 3 , 10 cM from it. In order to localize Me 3 and Me 4 on our reference intraspecific pepper linkage map, two AFLP markers were mapped. The Me 3 nearest marker was 10.1cM from a RAPD marker named Q04_0.3 and 2.7cM from a RFLP marker named CT135. We investigated map-position orthologies between Me 3 and two other nematode resistance genes, the tomato Mi-3 and the potato Gpa 2 genes, which mapped in the telomeric region of the short arm of the tomato and potato chromosome 12 (or XII for potato). Received: 23 March 2000 / Accepted: 2 January 2001  相似文献   

6.
Rhizoctonia solani is a necrotrophic fungal pathogen that causes disease on many crop-plant species. Anastomosis group 1-IA is the causal agent of sheath blight of rice (Oryza sativa L.), one of the most important rice diseases worldwide. R. solani AG1-IA produces a necrosis-inducing phytotoxin and rice cultivar’s sensitivity to the toxin correlates with disease susceptibility. Unlike genetic analyses of sheath blight resistance where resistance loci have been reported as quantitative trait loci, phytotoxin sensitivity is inherited as a Mendelian trait that permits high-resolution mapping of the sensitivity genes. An F2 mapping population derived from parent cultivars ‘Cypress’ (toxin sensitive) and ‘Jasmine 85’ (toxin insensitive) was used to map Rsn1, the necrosis-inducing locus. Initial mapping based on 176 F2 progeny and 69 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers located Rsn1 on the long arm of chromosome 7, with tight linkage to SSR marker RM418. A high-resolution genetic map of the region was subsequently developed using a total of 1,043 F2 progeny, and Rsn1 was mapped to a 0.7 cM interval flanked by markers NM590 and RM418. Analysis of the corresponding 29 Kb genomic sequences from reference cultivars ‘Nipponbare’ and ‘93-11’ revealed the presence of four putative genes within the interval. Two are expressed cytokinin-O-glucosyltransferases, which fit an apoptotic pathway model of toxin activity, and are individually being investigated further as potential candidates for Rsn1.  相似文献   

7.
The brown planthopper (BPH), Nilaparvata lugens (Stål), is one of the most serious and destructive pests of rice, and can be found throughout the rice-growing areas of Asia. To date, more than 24 major BPH-resistance genes have been reported in several Oryza sativa ssp. indica cultivars and wild relatives. Here, we report the genetic basis of the high level of BPH resistance derived from an Indian rice cultivar, ADR52, which was previously identified as resistant to the whitebacked planthopper (Sogatella furcifera [Horváth]). An F2 population derived from a cross between ADR52 and a susceptible cultivar, Taichung 65 (T65), was used for quantitative trait locus (QTL) analysis. Antibiosis testing showed that multiple loci controlled the high level of BPH resistance in this F2 population. Further linkage analysis using backcross populations resulted in the identification of BPH-resistance (antibiosis) gene loci from ADR52. BPH25 co-segregated with marker S00310 on the distal end of the short arm of chromosome 6, and BPH26 co-segregated with marker RM5479 on the long arm of chromosome 12. To characterize the virulence of the most recently migrated BPH strain in Japan, preliminary near-isogenic lines (pre-NILs) and a preliminary pyramided line (pre-PYL) carrying BPH25 and BPH26 were evaluated. Although both pre-NILs were susceptible to the virulent BPH strain, the pre-PYL exhibited a high level of resistance. The pyramiding of resistance genes is therefore likely to be effective for increasing the durability of resistance against the new virulent BPH strain in Japan.  相似文献   

8.
A major gene determining non-specific adult-plant disease resistance against stripe rust (Puccinia striiformis) designated Yrns-B1 was mapped by using a cross between ’Lgst.79–74’ (resistant) and ’Winzi’ (susceptible). Analyzing F3 lines of two consecutive experimental years contrary modes of inheritance were observed due to the intermediate character of the gene and the difference in the disease pressure during the seasons. Using the disease scoring data of both experimental years independently two maps were constructed detecting Yrns-B1 20.5 and 21.7 cM, respectively, proximal to the wheat microsatellite (WMS) marker Xgwm493 on the short arm of chromosome 3BS. The genetic relationships to other major genes or to quantitative trait loci controlling adult plant disease resistance against rusts in wheat are discussed. Received: 27 May 1999 / Accepted: 28 September 1999  相似文献   

9.
Aphanomyces root rot, caused by Aphanomyces cochlioides Drechs., is one of the most serious diseases of sugar beet (Beta vulgaris L.). Identification and characterization of resistance genes is a major task in sugar beet breeding. To ensure the effectiveness of marker-assisted screening for Aphanomyces root rot resistance, genetic analysis of mature plants’ phenotypic and molecular markers’ segregation was carried out. At a highly infested field site, some 187 F2 and 66 F3 individuals, derived from a cross between lines ‘NK-310mm-O’ (highly resistant) and ‘NK-184mm-O’ (susceptible), were tested, over two seasons, for their level of resistance to Aphanomyces root rot. This resistance was classified into six categories according to the extent and intensity of whole plant symptoms. Simultaneously, two selected RAPD and 159 ‘NK-310mm-O’-coupled AFLP were used in the construction of a linkage map of 695.7 cM. Each of nine resultant linkage groups was successfully anchored to one of nine sugar beet chromosomes by incorporating 16 STS markers. Combining data for phenotype and molecular marker segregation, a single QTL was identified on chromosome III. This QTL explained 20% of the variance in F2 population (in the year 2002) and 65% in F3 lines (2003), indicating that this QTL plays a major role in the Aphanomyces root rot resistance. This is the first report of the genetic mapping of resistance to Aphanomyces-caused diseases in sugar beet.  相似文献   

10.
The brown planthopper (BPH) is one of the most destructive insect pests of rice in Thailand. We performed a cluster analysis that revealed the existence of four groups corresponding to the variation of virulence against BPH resistance genes in 45 BPH populations collected in Thailand. Rice cultivars Rathu Heenati and PTB33, which carry Bph3, showed a broad-spectrum resistance against all BPH populations used in this study. The resistant gene Bph3 has been extensively studied and used in rice breeding programs against BPH; however, the chromosomal location of Bph3 in the rice genome has not yet been determined. In this study, a simple sequence repeat (SSR) analysis was performed to identify and localize the Bph3 gene derived from cvs. Rathu Heenati and PTB33. For mapping of the Bph3 locus, we developed two backcross populations, BC1F2 and BC3F2, from crosses of PTB33 × RD6 and Rathu Heenati × KDML105, respectively, and evaluated these for BPH resistance. Thirty-six polymorphic SSR markers on chromosomes 4, 6 and 10 were used to survey 15 resistant (R) and 15 susceptible (S) individuals from the backcross populations. One SSR marker, RM190, on chromosome 6 was associated with resistance and susceptibility in both backcross populations. Additional SSR markers surrounding the RM190 locus were also examined to define the location of Bph3. Based on the linkage analysis of 208 BC1F2 and 333 BC3F2 individuals, we were able to map the Bph3 locus between two flanking SSR markers, RM589 and RM588, on the short arm of chromosome 6 within 0.9 and 1.4 cM, respectively. This study confirms both the location of Bph3 and the allelic relationship between Bph3 and bph4 on chromosome 6 that have been previously reported. The tightly linked SSR markers will facilitate marker-assisted gene pyramiding and provide the basis for map-based cloning of the resistant gene.  相似文献   

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