4.5 Article

Major Susceptibility Gene Epistasis over Minor Gene Resistance to Spot Form Net Blotch in a Commercial Barley Cultivar

Journal

PHYTOPATHOLOGY
Volume 113, Issue 6, Pages 1058-1065

Publisher

AMER PHYTOPATHOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1094/PHYTO-10-22-0376-R

Keywords

Hordeum vulgare; inverse gene-for-gene model; necrotrophic fungal pathogen; susceptibility locus

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Spot form net blotch is a significant global disease of barley, and the Baudin cultivar shows minor seedling resistance to it. However, a local isolate called M3 has gained virulence against a major susceptibility gene in Baudin, making it highly susceptible. This susceptibility gene, designated Spm1, maps to a 190-kb section of chromosome 1H.
Spot form net blotch, caused by Pyrenophora teres f. maculata, is a significant global disease of barley (Hordeum vulgare). Baudin, a barley cultivar that was until recently extensively grown in Western Australia, was reported as having minor seedling resistance. However, Baudin was highly susceptible to a local isolate, M3, suggesting that this isolate had gained virulence against a major susceptibility gene. M3 causes atypical lesions with pale centers early in the infection, with initial screens of a segregating population indicating that this was determined by a single locus in the Baudin genome. The susceptibility was semidominant in F-1 progeny and the susceptibility gene, designated Spm1 (Susceptibility to P. teres f. maculata 1), mapped to a 190-kb section of the resistance gene-rich Mla region of chromosome 1H. Phenotyping with Ptm SP1, a non-M3 pathotype, identified a seedling resistance locus on 2H. Minor gene resistance is generally regarded as potentially durable, but our findings suggest the resistance to spot form net blotch in Baudin is nullified by strong susceptibility conferred by a separate locus on 1H.

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