Eric S. Nazareno, Roger Caspers, Melanie Caffe, Kevin Smith, Howard W. Rines, Shahryar F. Kianian
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Registration of CDL-111 and CDL-167 oat germplasm lines with pyramided adult plant crown rust resistance
Oat (Avena sativa L.) production worldwide is constrained by crown rust (caused by Puccinia coronata f. sp. avenae), which can cause significant yield losses. The disease is often controlled by spraying fungicides or planting resistant cultivars. Developing host resistance, however, is a challenge due to the high genetic variability of the pathogen. Race-specific resistance usually succumbs to new races in just a few years. As such, the USDA-ARS Cereal Disease Laboratory developed mapping populations to identify adult plant resistance (APR) loci from Avena sativa donors. Resistant lines from the mapping populations were selected and crossed with buckthorn (Rhamnus cathartica L.) nursery selection lines BT1020-1-1 and BT1021-1-1, which possess a different gene for crown rust resistance derived from Avena strigosa. From the crosses, CDL-111 (Reg. no. GP-122, PI 702639) and CDL-167 (Reg. no. GP-123, PI 702640), both containing three APR quantitative trait loci, were selected as germplasm for resistance breeding. High-throughput markers for selection were developed and implemented in pyramiding the APR loci.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Plant Registrations is an official publication of the Crop Science Society of America and the premier international venue for plant breeders, geneticists, and genome biologists to publish research describing new and novel plant cultivars, germplasms, parental lines, genetic stocks, and genomic mapping populations. In addition to biomedical, nutritional, and agricultural scientists, the intended audience includes policy makers, humanitarian organizations, and all facets of food, feed, fiber, bioenergy, and shelter industries. The scope of articles includes (1) cultivar, germplasm, parental line, genetic stock, and mapping population registration manuscripts, (2) short manuscripts characterizing accessions held within Plant Germplasm Collection Systems, and (3) descriptions of plant genetic materials that have made a major impact on agricultural security. Registration of plant genetic resources, item (1) above, requires deposit of plant genetic material into the USDA ARS National Plant Germplasm System prior to publication.