Plant Disease,Vol. 108, No. 6,June 2024
Minghu Zhang,Xin Liu,Lei Wu,Ke Zhou,Jiaru Yang,Yongpiao Miao,Ming Hao,Shunzong Ning,Zhongwei Yuan,Bo Jiang,Xuejiao Chen,Xue Chen,Lianquan Zhang,Lin Huang, and
Dengcai Liu
Abstract
Stripe rust, caused byPuccinia striiformis f. sp.tritici(Pst), is one of the most destructive fungal diseases of wheat. Cultivated einkorn (Triticum monococcum L. ssp.monococcum, 2n= 2x= 14, AmAm), one of the founder crops of agriculture, harbors unexploited genetic sources for wheat improvement. An advanced wheat line, Z15-1949, with 42 chromosomes, selected from the hybrids of Pst-susceptible common wheat cultivar Crocus and resistant T. monococcumaccession 10-1, exhibits high resistance to a mixture of the prevalent ChinesePstraces. Genetic analysis on F1, F2, and F2:3generations of the cross between Z15-1949 andPst-susceptible common wheat SY95-71 indicated that the resistance of Z15-1949 was conferred by a recessive gene, tentatively designated as YrZ15-1949. This gene was mapped to the short arm of chromosome 7D using the Wheat 55K single nucleotide polymorphism array, flanked by markers KASP-1949-2 and KASP-1949-10within a 3.3-cM genetic interval corresponding to a 1.12-Mb physical region in the Chinese Spring reference genome V2.0. The gene differs from previously reportedYrgenes on 7D based on their physical positions and is probably a novel gene.YrZ15-1949 would be a valuable resource for developingPst-resistant wheat cultivars, and the linked markers could be used for marker-assisted selection.