4.7 Article

Inoculum production of Phytophthora medicaginis can be used to screen for partial resistance in chickpea genotypes

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PLANT SCIENCE
Volume 14, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2023.1115417

Keywords

root disease; phenotyping; tolerance; quantitative resistance; pathogen proliferation

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Phytophthora medicaginis is causing root rot disease in chickpeas in Australia and breeding for genetic resistance is a crucial approach due to limited management options. Crosses between chickpea and Cicer echinospermum provide partial resistance with genetic basis from C. echinospermum and disease tolerance from C. arietinum germplasm. The concentration of P. medicaginis DNA in soil can be used as an indicator of pathogen proliferation, and genotypes with consistently low levels of foliage symptoms have lower levels of soil inoculum.
Phytophthora root rot caused by Phytophthora medicaginis is an important disease of chickpeas (Cicer arietinum) in Australia with limited management options, increasing reliance on breeding for improved levels of genetic resistance. Resistance based on chickpea-Cicer echinospermum crosses is partial with a quantitative genetic basis provided by C. echinospermum and some disease tolerance traits originating from C. arietinum germplasm. Partial resistance is hypothesised to reduce pathogen proliferation, while tolerant germplasm may contribute some fitness traits, such as an ability to maintain yield despite pathogen proliferation. To test these hypotheses, we used P. medicaginis DNA concentrations in the soil as a parameter for pathogen proliferation and disease assessments on lines of two recombinant inbred populations of chickpea-C. echinospermum crosses to compare the reactions of selected recombinant inbred lines and parents. Our results showed reduced inoculum production in a C. echinospermum backcross parent relative to the C. arietinum variety Yorker. Recombinant inbred lines with consistently low levels of foliage symptoms had significantly lower levels of soil inoculum compared to lines with high levels of visible foliage symptoms. In a separate experiment, a set of superior recombinant inbred lines with consistently low levels of foliage symptoms was tested for soil inoculum reactions relative to control normalised yield loss. The in-crop P. medicaginis soil inoculum concentrations across genotypes were significantly and positively related to yield loss, indicating a partial resistance-tolerance spectrum. Disease incidence and the rankings for in-crop soil inoculum were correlated strongly to yield loss. These results indicate that soil inoculum reactions may be useful to identify genotypes with high levels of partial resistance.

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