A rare single nucleotide variant in <i>Pm5e</i> confers powdery mildew resistance in common wheat

Jingzhong Xie(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Guanghao Guo(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yong Wang(Institute of Vegetables and Flowers), Tiezhu Hu(Henan Institute of Science and Technology), Lili Wang(China Agricultural University), Jingting Li(Pingdingshan University), Dan Qiu(Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences), Yahui Li(Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences), Qiuhong Wu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Ping Lu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yongxing Chen(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Lingli Dong(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Miaomiao Li(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Huaizhi Zhang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Panpan Zhang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Keyu Zhu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Beibei Li(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Karin R. Deal(University of California, Davis), Naxin Huo(Western Regional Research Center), Zhang Yan(China Agricultural University), Ming‐Cheng Luo(University of California, Davis), Sanzhen Liu(Kansas State University), Yong Gu(Western Regional Research Center), Hongjie Li(Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences), Zhiyong Liu(Chinese Academy of Sciences)
New Phytologist
June 22, 2020
Cited by 181Open Access
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Abstract

Powdery mildew poses severe threats to wheat production. The most sustainable way to control this disease is through planting resistant cultivars. We report the map-based cloning of the powdery mildew resistance allele Pm5e from a Chinese wheat landrace. We applied a two-step bulked segregant RNA sequencing (BSR-Seq) approach in developing tightly linked or co-segregating markers to Pm5e. The first BSR-Seq used phenotypically contrasting bulks of recombinant inbred lines (RILs) to identify Pm5e-linked markers. The second BSR-Seq utilized bulks of genetic recombinants screened from a fine-mapping population to precisely quantify the associated genomic variation in the mapping interval, and identified the Pm5e candidate genes. The function of Pm5e was validated by transgenic assay, loss-of-function mutants and haplotype association analysis. Pm5e encodes a nucleotide-binding domain leucine-rich-repeat-containing (NLR) protein. A rare nonsynonymous single nucleotide variant (SNV) within the C-terminal leucine rich repeat (LRR) domain is responsible for the gain of powdery mildew resistance function of Pm5e, an allele endemic to wheat landraces of Shaanxi province of China. Results from this study demonstrate the value of landraces in discovering useful genes for modern wheat breeding. The key SNV associated with powdery mildew resistance will be useful for marker-assisted selection of Pm5e in wheat breeding programs.


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