Grass pea natural variation reveals oligogenic resistance to Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. pisi.

Publication Overview
TitleGrass pea natural variation reveals oligogenic resistance to Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. pisi.
AuthorsSampaio AM, Alves ML, Pereira P, Valiollahi E, Santos C, Šatović Z, Rubiales D, Araújo SS, van Eeuwijk F, Vaz Patto MC
TypeJournal Article
Journal NameThe plant genome
Year2021
Page(s)e20154
CitationSampaio AM, Alves ML, Pereira P, Valiollahi E, Santos C, Šatović Z, Rubiales D, Araújo SS, van Eeuwijk F, Vaz Patto MC. Grass pea natural variation reveals oligogenic resistance to Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. pisi.. The plant genome. 2021 Oct 07; e20154.

Abstract

Grass pea (Lathyrus sativus L.) is an annual legume species, phylogenetically close to pea (Pisum sativum L.), that may be infected by Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. pisi (Fop), the causal agent of fusarium wilt in peas with vast worldwide yield losses. A range of responses varying from high resistance to susceptibility to this pathogen has been reported in grass pea germplasm. Nevertheless, the genetic basis of that diversity of responses is still unknown, hampering its breeding exploitation. To identify genomic regions controlling grass pea resistance to fusarium wilt, a genome-wide association study approach was applied on a grass pea worldwide collection of accessions inoculated with Fop race 2. Disease responses were scored in this collection that was also subjected to high-throughput based single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP) screening through genotyping-by-sequencing. A total of 5,651 high-quality SNPs were considered for association mapping analysis, performed using mixed linear models accounting for population structure. Because of the absence of a fully assembled grass pea reference genome, SNP markers' genomic positions were retrieved from the pea's reference genome v1a. In total, 17 genomic regions were associated with three fusarium wilt response traits in grass pea, anticipating an oligogenic control. Seven of these regions were located on pea chromosomes 1, 6, and 7. The candidate genes underlying these regions were putatively involved in secondary and amino acid metabolism, RNA (regulation of transcription), transport, and development. This study revealed important fusarium wilt resistance favorable grass pea SNP alleles, allowing the development of molecular tools for precision disease resistance breeding.

Features
This publication contains information about 5,651 features:
Feature NameUniquenameType
UNL_Ls_S3176UNL_Ls_S3176genetic_marker
UNL_Ls_S3177UNL_Ls_S3177genetic_marker
UNL_Ls_S3178UNL_Ls_S3178genetic_marker
UNL_Ls_S3179UNL_Ls_S3179genetic_marker
UNL_Ls_S3180UNL_Ls_S3180genetic_marker
UNL_Ls_S3181UNL_Ls_S3181genetic_marker
UNL_Ls_S3182UNL_Ls_S3182genetic_marker
UNL_Ls_S3183UNL_Ls_S3183genetic_marker
UNL_Ls_S3184UNL_Ls_S3184genetic_marker
UNL_Ls_S3185UNL_Ls_S3185genetic_marker
UNL_Ls_S3186UNL_Ls_S3186genetic_marker
UNL_Ls_S3187UNL_Ls_S3187genetic_marker
UNL_Ls_S3188UNL_Ls_S3188genetic_marker
UNL_Ls_S3189UNL_Ls_S3189genetic_marker
UNL_Ls_S3190UNL_Ls_S3190genetic_marker
UNL_Ls_S3191UNL_Ls_S3191genetic_marker
UNL_Ls_S3192UNL_Ls_S3192genetic_marker
UNL_Ls_S3193UNL_Ls_S3193genetic_marker
UNL_Ls_S3194UNL_Ls_S3194genetic_marker
UNL_Ls_S3195UNL_Ls_S3195genetic_marker
UNL_Ls_S3196UNL_Ls_S3196genetic_marker
UNL_Ls_S3197UNL_Ls_S3197genetic_marker
UNL_Ls_S3198UNL_Ls_S3198genetic_marker
UNL_Ls_S3199UNL_Ls_S3199genetic_marker
UNL_Ls_S3200UNL_Ls_S3200genetic_marker

Pages

Properties
Additional details for this publication include:
Property NameValue
Publication ModelPrint-Electronic
ISSN1940-3372
eISSN1940-3372
Publication Date2021 Oct 07
Journal AbbreviationPlant Genome
DOI10.1002/tpg2.20154
Elocation10.1002/tpg2.20154
Copyright© 2021 The Authors. The Plant Genome published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Crop Science Society of America.
LanguageEnglish
Language Abbreng
Publication TypeJournal Article
Journal CountryUnited States