4.2 Article

IDENTIFICATION OF DOWNY MILDEW RESISTANCE GENE CANDIDATES BY POSITIONAL CLONING IN MAIZE (ZEA MAYS SUBSP MAYS; POACEAE)

Journal

APPLICATIONS IN PLANT SCIENCES
Volume 5, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.3732/apps.1600132

Keywords

downy mildew; maize; positional cloning; quantitative reverse-transcription PCR (RT-PCR); spreader row; technique

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center dot Premise of the study: Positional cloning in combination with phenotyping is a general approach to identify disease-resistance gene candidates in plants; however, it requires several time-consuming steps including population or fine mapping. Therefore, in the present study, we suggest a new combined strategy to improve the identification of disease-resistance gene candidates. center dot Methods and Results: Downy mildew (DM)-resistant maize was selected from five cultivars using a spreader row technique. Positional cloning and bioinformatics tools were used to identify the DM-resistance quantitative trait locus marker (bnlg1702) and 47 protein-coding gene annotations. Eventually, five DM-resistance gene candidates, including bZIP34, Bak1, and Ppr, were identified by quantitative reverse-transcription PCR (RT-PCR) without fine mapping of the bnlg1702 locus. center dot Conclusions: The combined protocol with the spreader row technique, quantitative trait locus positional cloning, and quantitative RT-PCR was effective for identifying DM-resistance candidate genes. This cloning approach may be applied to other whole-genome- sequenced crops or resistance to other diseases.

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