Identifying molecular markers linked to tobacco bacterial wilt resistance is crucial for developing resistant tobacco varieties, thereby enhancing tobacco production and quality. In this two-year study, we evaluated the tobacco bacterial wilt disease index (TBWDI) in a mapping population of 78 tobacco accessions using SSR/InDel markers across 1377 marker loci. Two association models, GLM_Q and MLM_Q + Kinship, were used for association analysis. By considering multiple environments, selection thresholds, and phenotype values, we identified 19 reliable marker loci (P = 7.07-E05-4.98-E02) that explained 5.37-19.10 % of the phenotypic variation. Among these, we selected 11 accessions with high resistance to tobacco bacterial wilt, each containing at least one excellent locus. The models predicted five hybrid combinations whose offspring aggregated additional excellent loci. Additionally, one locus was identified during quantitative trait loci mapping, with accessions carrying this locus exhibiting significantly different TBWDI values from those without it, confirming its reliability and stability. A candidate gene (LOC107795335) was also identified downstream at 17.58 Kbp of the locus. Our study pinpointed reliable loci associated with bacterial wilt resistance, identified important materials for breeding resistant tobacco varieities, and predicted the best hybrid combinations for low disease indexes. The results of our study offer invaluable theoretical insights for breeding varieties with high and stable resistance.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11492594 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2024.e38939 | DOI Listing |
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