Stripe rust caused by f. sp. is one of the most destructive diseases of wheat. Identifying novel resistance genes applicable for developing disease-resistant cultivars is important for the sustainable control of wheat stripe rust. Chinese wheat landrace 'Xiaohemai' ('XHM') is an elite germplasm line with all-stage resistance (ASR) effective against predominant Chinese f. sp. races. In this study, we performed a bulked segregant analysis coupled with exome capture sequencing (BSE-seq) to identify a candidate genomic region strongly associated with stripe rust resistance on chromosome 1AL in 173 lines derived from the cross 'XHM' × 'Avocet S'. The gene, designated as , was validated by a conventional quantitative trait locus analysis using newly developed Kompetitive allele-specific PCR (KASP) markers, explaining up to 48.50% of the phenotypic variance. By testing a secondary mapping population comprising 144 lines from the same cross at the seedling stage with prevalent f. sp. race CYR34, was identified as a single Mendelian factor in a 1.5-cM interval flanked by KASP markers and . This region corresponded to a 5.76-Mb genomic interval on 'Chinese Spring' chromosome 1AL. Furthermore, two cosegregating KASP markers showed high polymorphisms among 130 Chinese wheat cultivars and could be used for marker-assisted selection. Because no other genes for ASR that originated from common wheat have been detected on chromosome 1AL, is likely a novel gene that can be incorporated into modern breeding materials to develop wheat cultivars with enhanced stripe rust resistance.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1094/PDIS-08-21-1618-REDOI Listing

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