Cloning of the wheat leaf rust resistance gene Lr47 introgressed from Aegilops speltoides

Hongna Li(Shandong Academy of Agricultural Sciences), Lei Hua(Shandong Academy of Agricultural Sciences), Shuqing Zhao(Hebei Agricultural University), Ming Hao(Sichuan Agricultural University), Rui Song(Shandong Academy of Agricultural Sciences), Shuyong Pang(Hebei Agricultural University), Yanna Liu(Shandong Academy of Agricultural Sciences), Hong Chen(Sichuan Agricultural University), Wenjun Zhang(University of California, Davis), Tao Shen(Shandong Academy of Agricultural Sciences), Jin‐Ying Gou(China Agricultural University), Hailiang Mao(Huazhong Agricultural University), Guiping Wang(Shandong Academy of Agricultural Sciences), Xiaohua Hao(Shandong Academy of Agricultural Sciences), Jian Li(Shandong Academy of Agricultural Sciences), Baoxing Song(Shandong Academy of Agricultural Sciences), Caixia Lan(Huazhong Agricultural University), Zaifeng Li(Hebei Agricultural University), Xing Wang Deng(Shandong Academy of Agricultural Sciences), Jorge Dubcovsky(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Xiaodong Wang(Hebei Agricultural University), Shisheng Chen(Shandong Academy of Agricultural Sciences)
Nature Communications
September 28, 2023
Cited by 62Open Access
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Abstract

Leaf rust, caused by Puccinia triticina Eriksson (Pt), is one of the most severe foliar diseases of wheat. Breeding for leaf rust resistance is a practical and sustainable method to control this devastating disease. Here, we report the identification of Lr47, a broadly effective leaf rust resistance gene introgressed into wheat from Aegilops speltoides. Lr47 encodes a coiled-coil nucleotide-binding leucine-rich repeat protein that is both necessary and sufficient to confer Pt resistance, as demonstrated by loss-of-function mutations and transgenic complementation. Lr47 introgression lines with no or reduced linkage drag are generated using the Pairing homoeologous1 mutation, and a diagnostic molecular marker for Lr47 is developed. The coiled-coil domain of the Lr47 protein is unable to induce cell death, nor does it have self-protein interaction. The cloning of Lr47 expands the number of leaf rust resistance genes that can be incorporated into multigene transgenic cassettes to control this devastating disease.


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