July
2012
, Volume
102
, Number
7
Pages
700
-
706
Authors
M.
RoyChowdhury
,
Y.
Jia
,
M. H.
Jia
,
R.
Fjellstrom
,
and
R. D.
Cartwright
Affiliations
First and fifth authors: Cell and Molecular Biology Program, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville 72701; and second, third, and fourth authors: U.S. Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service, Dale Bumpers National Rice Research Center (DB NRRC), Stuttgart, AR 72160.
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Accepted for publication 6 April 2012.
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The Pib gene in rice confers resistance to a wide range of races of the rice blast pathogen, Magnaporthe oryzae, including race IE1k that overcomes Pita, another broad-spectrum resistance gene. In this study, the presence of Pib was determined in 164 rice germplasm accessions from a core subset of the National Small Grains Collection utilizing DNA markers and pathogenicity assays. The presence of Pib was evaluated with two simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers and a dominant marker (Pib-dom) derived from the Pib gene sequence. Pathogenicity assays using two avirulent races (IE1k and IB1) and a virulent race (IB54) were performed to verify the resistance responses of accessions. Of the 164 accessions evaluated, 109 contained the Pib gene as determined using both SSR markers and pathogenicity assays, albeit different haplotypes were detected. The remaining 52 germplasm accessions were different in their responses to the blast races IB54, IE1k, and IB1, thus indicating the presence of R gene(s) other than Pib. The accessions characterized in this study could be used for marker-assisted breeding to improve blast resistance in indica and japonica cultivars worldwide.
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ArticleCopyright
This article is in the public domain and not copyrightable. It may be freely reprinted with customary crediting of the source. The American Phytopathological Society, 2012.