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Partial Resistance of Pepper to Bacterial Wilt Is Oligogenic and Stable Under Tropical Conditions

May 2005 , Volume 89 , Number  5
Pages  501 - 506

Denis Lafortune and Michel Béramis , INRA-URPV, Domaine Duclos, Prise d'eau, 97170 Petit Bourg, France ; and Anne-Marie Daubèze , Nathalie Boissot , and Alain Palloix , INRA-GAFL, BP 94, 84143 Montfavet Cedex, France



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Accepted for publication 8 January 2005.
ABSTRACT

Genetic analysis of resistance of pepper to bacterial wilt was performed in the doubled haploid progeny from a cross between a resistant parental line PM 687 and a susceptible cultivar Yolo Wonder. After artificial inoculation with a local isolate of Ralstonia solanacearum, the progeny consisting of 90 lines was transplanted into a naturally infested field in Guadeloupe, Lesser Antilles. The 2 years of experimentation resulted in repeatable results, with a high heritability of the resistance, attesting the reliability of the evaluation procedure and the stability of the resistance over years. Two to five genes with additive effects were estimated to control the resistance, indicating an oligogenic control as observed in tomato sources of resistance. Relationships with resistance to other soilborne or tropical diseases were examined. Susceptibility to Tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) and to nematodes (Meloidogyne spp.) were significantly linked with resistance to bacterial wilt, whereas neither resistance to Phytophthora capsici nor to Leveillula taurica were linked. The similarity of the genetics of resistance to bacterial wilt in pepper and tomato and linkage with TMV resistance locus warrant the comparative mapping of the resistance quantitative trait loci in the genomes of the two species.


Additional keywords: Capsicum annuum, doubled haploid lines, field resistance, genetic linkage

© 2005 The American Phytopathological Society