Juan Zhu, Hui Zhou, Mengna Zhang, Yi Hong, Yuhang Zhang, Chao Lv, Baojian Guo, Feifei Wang, Rugen Xu
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) is the fourth largest cereal crop in the world after rice, wheat and maize. Barley yellow mosaic disease (BYMD) is a serious threat to winter barley production. The evolution and mutation of virus strains lead to the breakdown of the resistance of the originally resistant varieties. It is therefore vital to explore new BYMD resistance genes. In this study, a natural population (334 barley varieties or lines) and a double haploid population derived from the cross between Tam407227 and Franklin were used to search for new quantitative trait loci (QTL) for BYMD resistance. Two major QTL on chromosomes 3H and 7H, respectively, were detected from the genome wide association study and validated in the DH population. Among them, The QTL on 3H (qRYM-3H/qTFRYM-3H) was confirmed to be the reported BYMD resistance gene eIF4E by haplotype analysis. And the QTL on 7H (qRYM-7H/qTFRYM-7H) is a novel QTL that has not been reported before. Another QTL on 2H was identified from the DH population. This QTL is more likely the Rmy16Hb reported previously. These three QTL showed an additive effect on improving BYMD resistance with the average disease scores from 2.45 (all sensitive alleles for these three QTL) to 0.62 (all tolerant alleles for these three QTL). The candidate genes for the novel QTL qRYM-7H/qTFRYM-7H were predicted based on transcriptome sequencing and qPCR analysis.
期刊介绍:
Plant Molecular Biology is an international journal dedicated to rapid publication of original research articles in all areas of plant biology.The Editorial Board welcomes full-length manuscripts that address important biological problems of broad interest, including research in comparative genomics, functional genomics, proteomics, bioinformatics, computational biology, biochemical and regulatory networks, and biotechnology. Because space in the journal is limited, however, preference is given to publication of results that provide significant new insights into biological problems and that advance the understanding of structure, function, mechanisms, or regulation. Authors must ensure that results are of high quality and that manuscripts are written for a broad plant science audience.