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Genetic basis of seedling‐resistance to leaf rust in bread wheat ‘Thatcher’
Author(s) -
Mishra A. N.,
Kaushal K.,
Shirsekar G. S.,
Yadav S. R.,
Brahma R. N.,
Pandey H. N.
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
plant breeding
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.583
H-Index - 71
eISSN - 1439-0523
pISSN - 0179-9541
DOI - 10.1111/j.1439-0523.2005.01141.x
Subject(s) - biology , seedling , rust (programming language) , cultivar , gene , resistance (ecology) , botany , wheat leaf rust , horticulture , agronomy , genetics , virulence , computer science , programming language
The bread wheat cultivar ‘Thatcher’ is documented to carry the gene Lr22b for adult‐plant resistance to leaf rust. Seedling‐resistance to leaf rust caused by Puccinia triticina in the bread wheat cultivar ‘Thatcher’, the background parent of the near‐isogenic lines for leaf rust resistance genes in wheat, is rare and no published information could be found on its genetic basis. The F 2 and F 3 analysis of the cross ‘Agra Local’ (susceptible) × ‘Thatcher’ showed that an apparently incompletely dominant gene conditioned seedling‐resistance in ‘Thatcher’ to the three ‘Thatcher’‐avirulent Indian leaf rust pathotypes – 0R8, 0R8‐1 and 0R9. Test of allelism revealed that this gene (temporarily designated LrKr1 ) was derived from ‘Kanred’, one of the parents of ‘Thatcher’. Absence of any susceptible F 2 segregants in a ‘Thatcher’ × ‘Marquis’ cross confirmed that an additional gene (temporarily designated LrMq1 ) derived from ‘Marquis’, another parent of ‘Thatcher’, was effective against pathotype 0R9 alone. These two genes as well as a second gene in ‘Kanred’ (temporarily designated LrKr2 ), which was effective against all the three pathotypes, but has not been inherited by ‘Thatcher’, seem to be novel, undocumented leaf rust resistance genes.