| Literature DB >> 34821981 |
Laura Bouvet1,2, Sarah Holdgate1, Lucy James1, Jane Thomas1, Ian J Mackay1,3, James Cockram4.
Abstract
Wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) is a global commodity, and its production is a key component underpinning worldwide food security. Yellow rust, also known as stripe rust, is a wheat disease caused by the fungus Puccinia striiformis Westend f. sp. tritici (Pst), and results in yield losses in most wheat growing areas. Recently, the rapid global spread of genetically diverse sexually derived Pst races, which have now largely replaced the previous clonally propagated slowly evolving endemic populations, has resulted in further challenges for the protection of global wheat yields. However, advances in the application of genomics approaches, in both the host and pathogen, combined with classical genetic approaches, pathogen and disease monitoring, provide resources to help increase the rate of genetic gain for yellow rust resistance via wheat breeding while reducing the carbon footprint of the crop. Here we review key elements in the evolving battle between the pathogen and host, with a focus on solutions to help protect future wheat production from this globally important disease.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34821981 PMCID: PMC8942934 DOI: 10.1007/s00122-021-03983-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Theor Appl Genet ISSN: 0040-5752 Impact factor: 5.574
Fig. 1The Puccinia striiformis Westend f. sp. tritici (Pst) lifecycle. Wheat Pst infection at the adult plant stage in wheat, showing a yellow, and b orange coloured pustules that shed urediniospores. c Symptoms of Pst infection of the wheat ear. False colour scanning electron microscopy images of d urediniospores, e pustules on the wheat leaf surface, and f pustule in cross section. g Diagram illustrating the main features of the Pst lifecycle. Top left: Wheat plants can be infected by, (i) wind-blown single-cell dihaploid dikaryotic urediniospores (containing one haploid genome copy in each of the two nuclei within the cell: n + n′) produced on wheat, or (ii) by aeciospores (n + n′) produced on the alternative host (Berberis spp.). Yellow rust infection is typically observable on the heat upper leaf surface as parallel rows of yellow to orange pustules which release urediniospores, resulting in cycles of re-infection and cross-infection in wheat. Top middle: at ear emergence, yellow rust infection can occur on the florets of the wheat ear. Top right: towards the end of the wheat season, telia may form on the underside of the epidermis, from which diploid doubled haploid (2*n) two-celled teliospores are produced by karyogamy. Teliospores readily germinate to produce haploid basidiospores. Bottom right: Basidiospores germinate and infect leaves of the alternate host. Bottom middle: Basidiospore infection leads to the production of pycnia, typically on the upper side of the leaves, which release haploid pycniospores. Fusion of pycniospores with the receptive hypha of a mating-type compatible pycnia leads to dikaryotization and the development of aecia on the leaf underside. Bottom left: Aecia release vegetative aeciospores (n + n′) which are only able to infect the primary host species (predominantly wheat). For more information, see Chen et al. (2014), Schwessinger (2016) or Mehmood et al. (2020) (colour figure online)
Cloned wheat rust resistance (R) genes.
| Cloned YR resistance genes | Original source | Chr | NCBI protein accession number | Gene functional annotation | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5D | ASR | ABS29034 | CC-NBS-LRR | Cloutier et al. ( | ||
| 1A | ASR | AAQ01784 | CC-NBS-LRR | Feuillet et al. ( | ||
| 1D | ASR | ACO53397 | NBS-LRR | Huang et al. ( | ||
| 2D | ASR | ARO38244 | CC-NBS-LRR | Thind et al. ( | ||
| 6A | ASR | ATE88995 | CC-NBS-LRR | Zhang et al. ( | ||
| 1D | ASR | AVK42833 | CC-NBS-LRR | Chen et al. ( | ||
| 7A | ASR | CUM44200 | CC-NBS-LRR | Steuernagel et al. ( | ||
| 1D | ASR | AGQ17384 | CC-NBS-LRR | Periyannan et al. ( | ||
| 3A | ASR | AGP75918 | CC-NBS-LRR | Saintenac et al. ( | ||
| 1D | ASR | CUM44213 | CC-NBS-LRR | Steuernagel et al. ( | ||
| 2D | ASR | AYV61514 | CC-NBS-LRR | Arora et al. ( | ||
| 1R† | ASR | ALO61074 | CC-NBS-LRR | Mago et al. ( | ||
| 5A | ASR | LRRK123 | Tandem kinase | Chen et al. ( | ||
| 1D | ASR | CC-NBS-LRR | Arora et al. ( | |||
| 4D | ASR | QDW65446 | CC-NBS-LRR | Zhang et al. ( | ||
| 2B | ASR | QEQ12705/QEQ12706 | BED-NBS-LRR | Marchal et al. ( | ||
| 2B | ASR | QEQ12704 | BED-NBS-LRR | Marchal et al. ( | ||
| 1B | ASR | AAG42168 | CC-NBS-LRR | Liu et al. ( | ||
| 1B | ASR | AXC33067 | TKP | Klymiuk et al. ( | ||
| 7D | APR | ACN41354 | ABC transporter | Krattinger et al. ( | ||
| 6B | APR | ACF33187 | Kinase-START | Fu et al. ( | ||
| 4D | APR | ALL26331 | Hexose transporter | Moore et al. ( |
ASR all-stage resistance. APR adult plant resistance. Lr leaf rust, Sr stem rust, Yr yellow rust. TKP tandem kinase-pseudokinase. Chr. chromosome.
†In bread wheat, the Sr50 locus from rye has been translocated to chromosome 1D
*See also Yuan et al. (2018), who indicate the CC-NBS-LRR gene identified by Liu et al. (2014) may not be the underlying gene