Leaf and stripe rust are major threats to wheat production worldwide. The effective, multiple rust resistances present in the Brazilian cultivar Toropi makes it an excellent choice for a genetic study of rust resistance. Testing of DNA from different seed lots of Toropi with 2,194 polymorphic 90K iSelect single nucleotide polymorphism markers identified significant genetic divergence, with as much as 35% dissimilarity between seed lots. As a result, further work was conducted with a single plant line derived from Toropi variant Toropi-6.4. A double haploid population with 168 lines derived from the cross Toropi-6.4 × Thatcher was phenotyped over multiple years and locations in Canada, New Zealand, and Kenya, with a total of seven field trials undertaken for leaf rust and nine for stripe rust. Genotyping with the 90K iSelect array, simple sequence repeat and Kompetitive allele-specific polymerase chain reaction markers resulted in a genetic map of 3,043 cM, containing 1,208 nonredundant markers. Significant quantitative trait loci (QTL) derived from Toropi-6.4 were identified in multiple environments on chromosomes 1B (/), 3B (), 4B (), 5A ( and ), and 5D (). The QTL / colocated with the multi-rust resistance locus , while the QTL located to the locus previously found in a wheat backcross population derived from Toropi. Comparisons of QTL combinations showed to contribute a significantly enhanced leaf rust resistance when combined with or , more so than when and were combined. A strong additive effect was also seen when the stripe rust resistance QTL and were combined.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1094/PHYTO-05-19-0159-R | DOI Listing |
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