4.6 Article

Genetic analysis of Soil-Borne Cereal Mosaic Virus response in durum wheat: evidence for the role of the major quantitative trait locus QSbm.ubo-2BS and of minor quantitative trait loci

Journal

MOLECULAR BREEDING
Volume 29, Issue 4, Pages 973-988

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11032-011-9673-8

Keywords

Soil-Borne Cereal Mosaic Virus; Triticum durum (Desf.); Linkage mapping; SSR; DArT markers; Marker-assisted selection

Funding

  1. Emilia-Romagna Region (Laboratorio SITEIA, Misura 4 Sviluppo di rete, Azione A)
  2. AGER-Agrofood and Reseach

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Genetic analysis of Soil-Borne Cereal Mosaic Virus (SBCMV) resistance in durum wheat was carried out using a population of 180 recombinant inbred lines (RILs) obtained from Simeto (susceptible) x Levante (resistant). The RILs were characterized for SBCMV response in the field under severe and uniform SBCMV infection in two growing seasons and genotyped with simple sequence repeat (SSR) and Diversity Arrays Technology(R) markers. Transgressive segregation was observed for disease reaction as estimated by symptom severity scores and virus concentration in leaves. Heritability of the disease response was high, with h(2) values consistently above 80%. A major quantitative trait locus (QTL) (QSbm.ubo-2BS) in the distal telomeric region of chromosome 2BS accounted for 60-70% of the phenotypic variation for symptom severity, 40-55% for virus concentration and 15-30% for grain yield. The favorable allele was contributed by Levante. Seven additional QTL influenced SBCMV resistance, with the low-susceptibility allele contributed by Levante at five QTL and by Simeto at the remaining two. The meta-QTL analysis carried out using the data from two mapping populations (Simeto x Levante and Meridiano x Claudio) suggests that in both populations SBCMV resistance is likely controlled by QSbm.ubo-2BS. Our results confine QSbm.ubo-2BS to a c. 2-cM-wide interval flanked by SSR markers that are already being used for marker-assisted selection.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available