| Literature DB >> 27888533 |
Yinggen Ke1, Hanqing Deng1, Shiping Wang1.
Abstract
Rice diseases caused by multiple pathogen species are a major obstacle to achieving optimal yield. Using host pathogen species-non-specific broad-spectrum resistance (BSR) for rice improvement is an efficient way to control diseases. Recent advances in rice genomics and improved understanding of the mechanisms of rice-pathogen interactions have shown that using a single gene to improve rice BSR to multiple pathogen species is technically possible and the necessary resources exist. A variety of rice genes, including major disease resistance genes and defense-responsive genes, which function in pattern-triggered immunity signaling, effector-triggered immunity signaling or quantitative resistance, can mediate BSR to two or more pathogen species independently. These genes encode diverse proteins and function differently in promoting disease resistance, thus providing a relatively broad choice for different breeding programs. This updated knowledge will facilitate rice improvement with pathogen species-non-specific BSR via gene marker-assisted selection or biotechnological approaches.Entities:
Keywords: bacterial blight; bacterial grain rot; bacterial streak; blast; breeding; brown spot; disease resistance; rice stripe disease; sheath blight
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Year: 2017 PMID: 27888533 DOI: 10.1111/tpj.13438
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plant J ISSN: 0960-7412 Impact factor: 6.417