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Identification of quantitative trait loci controlling resistance to gray leaf spot disease in maize
Authors:M. A. Saghai Maroof  Y. G. Yue  Z. X. Xiang  E. L. Stromberg  G. K. Rufener
Affiliation:(1) Department of Crop and Soil Environmental Sciences, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, 24061 Blacksburg, Virginia, USA;(2) Department of Plant Pathology, Physiology and Weed Sciences, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, 240621 Blacksburg, Virginia, USA;(3) ICI Seeds, 50246 Slater, Iowa, USA;(4) Present address: Research and Development Division, Union Camp Corporation, P.O. Box 3301, 08543 Princeton, NJ, USA
Abstract:Breeding maize for gray leaf spot (GLS) resistance has been hindered by the quantitative nature of the inheritance of GLS resistance and by the limitations of selection under less than optimumal disease pressure. In order to identify the quantitative trait loci (QTLs) controlling GLS resistance, a cross was made between B73 (susceptible) and Va14 (resistant) to generate a large F2 population. Six GLS disease assessments were made throughout the disease season for over 1000 F2 plants in 1989, and for 600 F2-derived F3 lines replicated in two blocks in 1990. RFLP analysis for78 marker loci representing all ten maize chromosomes was conducted in 239 F2 individuals including those with the extreme GLS disease phenotypes. The GLS disease scores of the three field evaluations, each averaged over six ratings, were separately used for the interval mapping in order to determine the consistency of the QTL effects. The heavy GLS disease pressure, meticulous disease ratings, and large population size of this study afforded us the sensitivity for detecting QTL effects. QTLs located on three chromosomes (1, 4, and 8) had large effects on GLS resistance, each explaining 35.0–56.0%, 8.8–14.3%, and 7.7–11.0% of the variance, respectively. These three QTL effects were remarkably consistent across three disease evaluations over 2 years and two generations. Smaller QTL effects were also found on chromosomes 2 and 5, but the chromosome-5 effect might be a false positive because it was not repeatable even in the same location. The chromosome-1 QTLs had the largest effect or highest R2 reported for any quantitative trait to-date. Except for the chromosome-4 gene, which was from the susceptible parent B73, the resistance alleles at all QTL were derived from Va14. The resistance QTLs on chromosomes 1 and 2 appear to have additive effects, but those on chromosomes 4 and 8 are dominant and recessive, respectively. Significant interaction between the QTLs on chromosomes 1 and 4 was detected in all three evaluations. Cumulatively, the four QTLs identified in this study explained 44, 60, and 68% of the variance in F2, and in F3 replications 1 and 2, respectively.
Keywords:Restriction fragment length polymorphism  Zea mays L.  Quantitative resistance  Oligogenic  Gene mapping
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