Allelic and Haplotypic Diversity at the Rp1 Rust Resistance Locus of MaizeSequence data from this article have been deposited with the EMBL/GenBank Data Libraries under accession nos. AY309779, AY309780, AY309781, AY309782, AY309783sc and scAY581258sc.

Shavannor M. Smith(Kansas State University), A. Pryor(ACT Government), Scot H. Hulbert(Kansas State University)
Genetics
August 1, 2004
Cited by 77Open Access
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Abstract

The maize Rp1 rust resistance locus is a complex consisting of a family of closely related resistance genes. The number of Rp1 paralogs in different maize lines (haplotypes) varied from a single gene in some stocks of the inbred A188 to >50 genes in haplotypes carrying the Rp1-A and Rp1-H specificities. The sequences of paralogs in unrelated haplotypes differ, indicating that the genetic diversity of Rp1-related genes is extremely broad in maize. Two unrelated haplotypes with five or nine paralogs had identical resistance phenotypes (Rp1-D) encoded in genes that differed by three nucleotides resulting in a single amino acid substitution. Genes in some haplotypes are more similar to each other than to any of the genes in other haplotypes indicating that they are evolving in a concerted fashion.


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