Sr45

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Stem rust resistance in Aegilops tauschii germplasm

Aegilops tauschii Coss., the D genome donor of hexaploid wheat, Triticum aestivum L., has been used extensively for the transfer of agronomically important traits to wheat, including stem rust resistance genes Sr33, Sr45, and Sr46. To identify potentially new stem rust resistance genes in A. tauschii germplasm, we evaluated 456 nonduplicated accessions deposited in the USDA National Small Grains Collection (Aberdeen, ID) and the Wheat Genetic and Genomic Resources Center collection (Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS), with races TTKSK (Ug99), TRTTF, TTTTF, TPMKC, RKQQC, and QTHJC of Puccinia graminis Pers.:Pers. f. sp. tritici Eriks. & E. Henn. Ninety-eight accessions (22%) were identified as resistant to race TTKSK. A broad range of resistant infection types (; to 2+) were found in reaction to race TTKSK. Resistance was significantly associated among most of the races in pairwise comparisons. However, resistance was largely race specific. Only 12 of the accessions resistant to race TTKSK were also resistant to the other five races. Results from this germplasm screening will facilitate further studies on the genetic characterization of accessions with potentially novel sources of resistance to race TTKSK.

Matthew N. Rouse, Eric L. Olson, Bikram S. Gill, Michael O. Pumphrey, and Yue Jin
Crop Science
Year: 
2011
Volume: 
51
Issue: 
5
Start Page: 
2074
Other Page(s): 
2078
Expert pick: 
False

Identification of a robust molecular marker for the detection of the stem rust resistance gene Sr45 in common wheat

Stem rust resistance gene Sr45, discovered in Aegilops tauschii, the progenitor of the D -genome of wheat, is effective against commercially important Puccinia graminis f. sp. tritici races prevalent in Australia, South Africa and the Ug99 race group. A synthetic hexaploid wheat (RL5406) generated by crossing Ae. tauschii accession RL5289 (carrying Sr45 and the leaf rust resistance gene Lr21) with a tetraploid experimental line ‘TetraCanthatch’ was previously used as the source in the transfer of these rust resistance genes to other hexaploid cultivars. Previous genetic studies on hexaploid wheats mapped Sr45 on the short arm of chromosome 1D with the following gene order: centromere–Sr45Sr33Lr21–telomere. To identify closely linked markers, we fine mapped the Sr45 region in a large mapping population generated by crossing CS1D5406 (disomic substitution line with chromosome 1D of RL5406 substituted for Chinese Spring 1D) with Chinese Spring. Closely linked markers based on 1DS-specific microsatellites, expressed sequence tags and AFLP were useful in the delineation of the Sr45 region. Sequences from an AFLP marker amplified a fragment that was linked with Sr45 at a distance of 0.39 cM. The fragment was located in a bacterial artificial chromosome clone of contig (ctg)2981 of the Ae. tauschii accession AL8/78 physical map. A PCR marker derived from clone MI221O11 of ctg2981 amplified 1DS-specific sequence that harboured an 18-bp indel polymorphism that specifically tagged the Sr45 carrying haplotype. This new Sr45 marker can be combined with a previously reported marker for Lr21, which will facilitate selecting Sr45 and Lr21 in breeding populations.

Sambasivam Periyannan , Urmil Bansal, Harbans Bariana, Karin Deal, Ming-Cheng Luo, Jan Dvorak, Evans Lagudah
TAG
Year: 
2014
Volume: 
127
Issue: 
4
Start Page: 
947
Other Page(s): 
955
Expert pick: 
False

Identification of markers linked with stem rust resistance genes Sr33 and Sr45

Stem rust caused by Puccinia graminis f. sp. tritici (Pgt) has been and still remains a major threat for wheat  production worldwide. Following “Green Revolution”, the disease was brought under control by the use of stem rust resistant semi dwarf spring wheats and least attention was given to stem rust improvement for several decades. Recently, evolution of a new Pgt  pathotype, Ug99, in Africa has threatened the global wheat industry. This pathotype was initially detected in Uganda during 1999 and later spread to neighbouring countries like Kenya and Ethiopia and now has reached Iran. This pathotype is virulent on many of the current stem rust resistance genes used in different wheat growing regions. Some of the effective stem rust resistance are derived from the wild relatives of wheat.  The genes Sr33 and Sr45, derived from Aegilops tauschii, were among the genes effective against Ug99.  The present study was planned to identify molecular markers closely linked with stem rust resistance genes Sr33 and Sr45.  

Sambasivam PK, Bansal UK, Hayden MJ, Lagudah, E, and Bariana HS
11th International Wheat Genetics Symposium 2008 Proceedings
Year: 
2008
Expert pick: 
False

Association of a stem rust resistance gene (Sr45) and two Russian wheat aphid resistance genes (Dn5 and Dn7) with mapped structural loci in wheat

A stem rust resistance gene, originally derived from Triticum tauschii accession RL5289 and present in the germplasm line 87M66-2-1, is here designated Sr45. Sr45 was found to be closely linked to Sr33 (9 ± 1.9 map units) and the centromere (21 ± 3.4 map units) on chromosome arm 1DS. Sr45 is believed to be the same gene as SrX. The Russian wheat aphid resistance gene, Dn5, was loosely linked (32 ± 5 map units) to Ep-D1b, which occurs on a translocation derived from T. ventricosum, and to the cn?D1 locus (37 ± 6.3 map units) on chromosome arm 7DL. Dn5 derives from T. aestivum accession Pl294994 which was found to express two novel Ep-1 alleles (proposed designations Ep-A1d and Ep-D1e). A gene (here designated Dn7) for Russian wheat aphid resistance that was derived from the rye accession, Turkey 77', mapped 14.5 ± 3.9 map units from Lr26 on the 1BL.1RS translocation.

G. F. Marais, W. G. Wessels, M. Horn, F. du Toit
South African Journal of Plant and Soil
Year: 
1998
Volume: 
15
Issue: 
2
Start Page: 
67
Other Page(s): 
71
Expert pick: 
False
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