4.6 Article

A new wild emmer wheat panel allows to map new loci associated with resistance to stem rust at seedling stage

Journal

PLANT GENOME
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/tpg2.20413

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This study characterized the genetic diversity and resistance to stem rust in wild emmer wheat. Novel marker-trait associations for stem rust resistance were identified through genome-wide association studies. The fast LD decay in wild emmer wheat enabled high-resolution mapping of loci for stem rust resistance.
Wheat stem rust, caused by Puccinia graminis f. sp. tritici (Pgt), is a major wheat disease worldwide. A collection of 283 wild emmer wheat [Triticum turgidum L. subsp. dicoccoides (Korn. ex Asch. & Graebn.) Thell] accessions, representative of the entire Fertile Crescent region where wild emmer naturally occurs, was assembled, genotyped, and characterized for population structure, genetic diversity, and rate of linkage disequilibrium (LD) decay. Then, the collection was employed for mapping Pgt resistance genes, as a proof of concept of the effectiveness of genome-wide association studies in wild emmer. The collection was evaluated in controlled conditions for reaction to six common Pgt pathotypes (TPMKC, TTTTF, JRCQC, TRTTF, TTKSK/Ug99, and TKTTF). Most resistant accessions originated from the Southern Levant wild emmer lineage, with some showing a resistance reaction toward three to six tested races. Association analysis was conducted considering a 12K polymorphic single-nucleotide polymorphisms dataset, kinship relatedness between accessions, and population structure. Eleven significant marker-trait associations (MTA) were identified across the genome, which explained from 17% to up to 49% of phenotypic variance with an average 1.5 additive effect (based on the 1-9 scoring scale). The identified loci were either effective against single or multiple races. Some MTAs colocalized with known Pgt resistance genes, while others represent novel resistance loci useful for durum and bread wheat prebreeding. Candidate genes with an annotated function related to plant response to pathogens were identified at the regions linked to the resistance and defined according to the estimated small LD (about 126 kb), as typical of wild species. A representative collection of wild emmer wheat was characterized for genetic diversity and resistance to stem rust.GWAS for stem rust resistance identified novel marker-trait associations in wild emmer wheat.Fast LD decay in wild emmer wheat allowed high-resolution mapping of loci for stem rust resistance.

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