February 2017

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Comparative Analysis Highlights Variable Genome Content of Wheat Rusts and Divergence of the Mating Loci

Three members of the Puccinia genus, P. triticina (Pt), P. striiformis f.sp. tritici (Pst), and P. graminis f.sp. tritici (Pgt), cause the most common and often most significant foliar diseases of wheat. While similar in biology and life cycle, each species is uniquely adapted and specialized. The genomes of Pt and Pst were sequenced and compared to that of Pgt to identify common and distinguishing gene content, to determine gene variation among wheat rust pathogens, other rust fungi and basidiomycetes, and to identify genes of significance for infection. Pt had the largest genome of the three, estimated at 135 Mb with expansion due to mobile elements and repeats encompassing 50.9% of contig bases; by comparison repeats occupy 31.5% for Pst and 36.5% for Pgt. We find all three genomes are highly heterozygous, with Pst (5.97 SNPs/kb) nearly twice the level detected in Pt (2.57 SNPs/kb) and that previously reported for Pgt. Of 1,358 predicted effectors in Pt, 784 were found expressed across diverse life cycle stages including the sexual stage. Comparison to related fungi highlighted the expansion of gene families involved in transcriptional regulation and nucleotide binding, protein modification, and carbohydrate degradation enzymes. Two allelic homeodomain pairs, HD1 and HD2, were identified in each dikaryotic Puccinia species along with three pheromone receptor (STE3) mating-type genes, two of which are likely representing allelic specificities. The HD proteins were active in a heterologous Ustilago maydis mating assay and host induced gene silencing of the HD and STE3 alleles reduced wheat host infection.

Christina A. Cuomo, Guus Bakkeren, Hala Badr Khalil, Vinay Panwar, David Joly, Rob Linning, Sharadha Sakthikumar, Xiao Song, Xian Adiconis, Lin Fan, Jonathan M. Goldberg, Joshua Z. Levin, Sarah Young, Qiandong Zeng, Yehoshua Anikster, Myron Bruce, Meinan Wang, Chuntao Yin, Brent McCallum, Les J. Szabo, Scot Hulbert, Xiaming Chen, John P. Fellers
G3
Year: 
2017
Volume: 
7
Issue: 
2
Expert pick: 
False
Month Posted: 

Association mapping of leaf rust resistance loci in a spring wheat core collection

Leaf rust is a common disease of wheat, consistently reducing yields in many wheat-growing regions of the world. Although fungicides are commonly applied to wheat in the United States (US), genetic resistance can provide less expensive, yet effective control of the disease. Our objectives were to map leaf rust resistance genes in a large core collection of spring wheat accessions selected from the United States Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service National Small Grains Collection (NSGC), determine whether previously characterized race-nonspecific resistance genes could be identified with our panel, and evaluate the use of targeted panels to identify seedling and adult plant resistance (APR) genes. Association mapping (AM) detected five potentially novel leaf rust resistance loci on chromosomes 2BL, 4AS, and 5DL at the seedling stage, and 2DL and 7AS that conditioned both seedling and adult plant resistance. In addition, ten potentially novel race-nonspecific resistance loci conditioned field resistance and lacked seedling resistance. Analyses of targeted subsets of the accessions identified additional loci not associated with resistance in the complete core panel. Using molecular markers, we also confirmed the presence and effectiveness of the race-nonspecific genes Lr34, Lr46, and Lr67 in our panel. Although most of the accessions in this study were susceptible to leaf rust in field and seedling tests, many resistance loci were identified with AM. Through the use of targeted subset panels, more loci were identified than in the larger core panels alone.

M. Kathryn Turner, James A. Kolmer, Michael O. Pumphrey, Peter Bulli, Shiaoman Chao, James A. Anderson
Theoretical and Applied Genetics
Year: 
2016
Volume: 
130
Issue: 
2
Start Page: 
345
Other Page(s): 
361
Expert pick: 
False
Month Posted: 

Identification and Validation of SNP Markers Linked to the Stripe Rust Resistance Gene Yr5 in Wheat

Stripe rust (Puccinia striiformis Westend f. sp. tritici) is a devastating disease for wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) production worldwide. Yr5 is a race-specific resistance gene, effective to all races that have been identified in the United States. Therefore, it has been increasingly used for US cultivar development. The goal of this study was to identify and validate single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) markers tightly linked with Yr5, evaluate their usefulness with a diverse set of wheat materials, and dissect the Yr5 region to search for candidate genes using a comparative genomic approach. Competitive allele-specific polymerase chain reaction (KASP) markers based on Illumina iSelect 9000 SNP loci IWA6121 and IWA4096 were identified as flanking markers for Yr5 in two spring wheat recombinant inbred line populations that were developed from crosses between moderately susceptible line ‘WA8149’ and Yr5 donors ‘S0900317’ and ‘S0900163.’ These markers were closer to the gene than previously reported markers. Haplotype analysis based on loci of these KASP markers in a set of the Pacific Northwest spring and winter wheat lines and a worldwide spring wheat core collection showed that the combined haplotype for these markers is nearly diagnostic for the presence of Yr5. The Yr5-syntenic regions in Brachypodium and rice (Oryza sativa L.) contained a putative gene encoding a nucleotide binding site–leucine-rich repeat disease resistance protein. Wheat gene Traes_2BL_B5FC3BC9E showed high similarity with these Brachypodium and rice genes, and a marker designed from this gene was mapped closest to Yr5 in the recombinant inbred line populations. This study provides useful SNP markers for Yr5 in wheat breeding programs and resources for potential map-based cloning of Yr5.

Yukiko Naruoka, Kaori Ando, Peter Bulli, Kebede T. Muleta, Sheri Rynearson and Michael O. Pumphrey
Crop Science
Year: 
2016
Volume: 
56
Issue: 
6
Start Page: 
3055
Other Page(s): 
3065
Expert pick: 
False
Month Posted: 
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