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Mapping <Emphasis Type="Italic">Ol-4</Emphasis>, a gene conferring resistance to <Emphasis Type="Italic">Oidium neolycopersici</Emphasis> and originating from <Emphasis Type="Italic">Lycopersicon peruvianum</Emphasis> LA2172, requires multi-allelic,single-locus markers
Authors:Email author" target="_blank">Y?BaiEmail author  R?van der?Hulst  C?C?Huang  L?Wei  P?Stam  Email author" target="_blank">P?LindhoutEmail author
Institution:(1) Graduate School of Experimental Plant Sciences, Laboratory of Plant Breeding, Wageningen University, The Netherlands;(2) Syngenta Seeds BV, Postbus 2, 1600 AA Enkhuizen, The Netherlands;(3) Henan Agricultural University, Wenhua Road No. 95, 450002 Zhengzhou, China
Abstract:Lycopersicon peruvianum LA2172 is completely resistant to Oidium neolycopersici, the causal agent of tomato powdery mildew. Despite the large genetic distance between the cultivated tomato and L. peruvianum, fertile F1 hybrids of L. esculentum cv. Moneymaker × L. peruvianum LA2172 were produced, and a pseudo-F2 population was generated by mating F1 half-sibs. The disease tests on the pseudo-F2 population and two BC1 families showed that the resistance in LA2172 is governed by one dominant gene, designated as Ol-4. In the pseudo-F2 population, distorted segregation was observed, and multi-allelic, single-locus markers were used to display different marker-allele configurations per locus. Parameters for both distortion and linkage between genetic loci were determined by maximum likelihood estimation, and the necessity of using multi-allelic, single-locus markers was illustrated. Finally, a genetic linkage map of chromosome 6 around the Ol-4 locus was constructed by using the pseudo-F2 population.
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