Two dominant genes in barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) complementarily encode perfect resistance to Japanese soil-borne wheat mosaic virus

Kaori Okada, Tsuyoshi Tanaka, Shuichi Fukuoka, Youko Oono, Kohei Mishina, Tetsuo Oikawa, Kazuhiro Sato, Tsuneo Kato, Takao Komatsuda, Kiyoshi Namai

研究成果査読

抄録

Japanese soil-borne wheat mosaic virus (Furovirus) is a damaging pathogen of wheat and barley. This virus can survive in the soil for several decades, so the deployment of resistant cultivars represents the only practi-cal control measure. Here, a genetic analysis has identified two regions of the barley genome—one on chromosome 2H and the other on chromosome 3H—as harboring gene(s) encoding resistance to this virus. The joint presence of both loci, termed Jmv1 and Jmv2, made the plants essentially immune, with resistance being dominant over susceptibility at each locus. Phylogenetic analysis showed that the virus is not closely related to the type Furovirus species Soil-borne wheat mosaic virus. There was a difference between the RNA1-and RNA2-based phylogenies of the virus species in Furovirus implying the independent segregation of the virus subgenomes.

本文言語English
ページ(範囲)372-382
ページ数11
ジャーナルBreeding Science
72
5
DOI
出版ステータスPublished - 2022

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • 農業および作物学
  • 遺伝学
  • 植物科学

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