4.5 Article

Aggressiveness of Phytophthora medicaginis on chickpea: Phenotyping method determines isolate ranking and host genotype-by-isolate interactions

Journal

PLANT PATHOLOGY
Volume 71, Issue 5, Pages 1076-1091

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ppa.13547

Keywords

pathogenic variation; quantitative resistance; resistance breeding; root disease

Funding

  1. Grains Research and Development Corporation, Australia [DAN00172]

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This study evaluated pathogenic variation in P. medicaginis populations and found differences in aggressiveness of isolates using different phenotyping methods. The study also showed that phenotyping methods interact with both isolate and host genotype reactions. The cup-based root inoculation method showed promise as a non-field-based phenotyping method, with significant correlations with genotype-isolate rankings in the field experiment for several disease parameters.
Phytophthora medicaginis causing Phytophthora root rot of chickpea (Cicer arietinum) is an important disease, with genetic resistance using C. arietinum x Cicer echinospermum crosses as the main disease management strategy. We evaluated pathogenic variation in P. medicaginis populations with the aim of improving phenotyping methods for disease resistance. We addressed the question of individual isolate aggressiveness across four different seedling-based phenotyping methods conducted in glasshouses and one field-based phenotyping method. Our results revealed that a seedling media surface inoculation method used on a susceptible C. arietinum variety and a moderately resistant C. arietinum x C. echinospermum backcross detected the greatest variability in aggressiveness among 37 P. medicaginis isolates. Evaluations of different components of resistance, using our different phenotyping methods, revealed that differential pathogen-isolate reactions occur with some phenotyping methods. We found support for our hypotheses that the level of aggressiveness of P. medicaginis isolates depends on the phenotyping method, and that phenotyping methods interact with both isolate and host genotype reactions. Our cup-based root inoculation method showed promise as a non-field-based phenotyping method, as it provided significant correlations with genotype-isolate rankings in the field experiment for a number of disease parameters.

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