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Title: Fine mapping and marker development for the wheat leaf rust resistance gene Lr32. Author: Sharma JS, McCartney CA, McCallum BD, Hiebert CW. Journal: G3 (Bethesda); 2023 Feb 09; 13(2):. PubMed ID: 36255270. Abstract: Wheat leaf rust is caused by the fungal pathogen Puccinia triticina and is one of the wheat diseases of concern globally. Among the known leaf rust resistance genes (Lr) genes, Lr32 is a broadly effective gene derived from the diploid species Aegilops tauschii coss. accession RL5497-1 and has been genetically mapped to chromosome arm 3DS. However, Lr32 resistance has not been utilized in current cultivars in part due to the lack of modern, predictive DNA markers. The goals of this study were to fine map the Lr32 region and develop SNP-based kompetitive allele-specific polymerase chain reaction markers. The genomic analysis was conducted by using doubled haploid and F2-derived mapping populations. For marker development, a 90K wheat chip array, 35K and 820K Axiom R SNPs, A. tauschii pseudomolecules v4.0 and International Wheat Genome Sequencing Consortium ReqSeq v2.1 reference genomes were used. Total 28 kompetitive allele-specific polymerase chain reaction and 2 simple sequence repeat markers were developed. The Lr32 region was fine mapped between kompetitive allele-specific polymerase chain reaction markers Kwh142 and Kwh355 that flanked 34-35 Mb of the diploid and hexaploid reference genomes. Leaf rust resistance mapped as a Mendelian trait that cosegregated with 20 markers, recombination restriction limited the further resolution of the Lr32 region. A total of 10-11 candidate genes associated with disease resistance were identified between the flanking regions on both reference genomes, with the majority belonging to the nucleotide-binding domain and leucine-rich repeat gene family. The validation analysis selected 2 kompetitive allele-specific polymerase chain reaction markers, Kwh147 and Kwh722, for marker-assisted selection. The presence of Lr32 along with other Lr genes such as Lr67 and Lr34 would increase the resistance in future wheat breeding lines and have a high impact on controlling wheat leaf rust.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]