| Literature DB >> 34099713 |
Jianping Zhang1,2, Timothy C Hewitt1,2, Willem H P Boshoff3, Ian Dundas4, Narayana Upadhyaya2, Jianbo Li1, Mehran Patpour5, Sutha Chandramohan2, Zacharias A Pretorius3, Mogens Hovmøller5, Wendelin Schnippenkoetter2, Robert F Park1, Rohit Mago2, Sambasivam Periyannan2, Dhara Bhatt2, Sami Hoxha1, Soma Chakraborty2, Ming Luo2, Peter Dodds2, Burkhard Steuernagel6, Brande B H Wulff6, Michael Ayliffe2, Robert A McIntosh1, Peng Zhang7, Evans S Lagudah8,9.
Abstract
The re-emergence of stem rust on wheat in Europe and Africa is reinforcing the ongoing need for durable resistance gene deployment. Here, we isolate from wheat, Sr26 and Sr61, with both genes independently introduced as alien chromosome introgressions from tall wheat grass (Thinopyrum ponticum). Mutational genomics and targeted exome capture identify Sr26 and Sr61 as separate single genes that encode unrelated (34.8%) nucleotide binding site leucine rich repeat proteins. Sr26 and Sr61 are each validated by transgenic complementation using endogenous and/or heterologous promoter sequences. Sr61 orthologs are absent from current Thinopyrum elongatum and wheat pan genome sequences, contrasting with Sr26 where homologues are present. Using gene-specific markers, we validate the presence of both genes on a single recombinant alien segment developed in wheat. The co-location of these genes on a small non-recombinogenic segment simplifies their deployment as a gene stack and potentially enhances their resistance durability.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34099713 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-23738-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919