Fine mapping of the Pc locus of Sorghum bicolor, a gene controlling the reaction to a fungal pathogen and its host-selective toxin

Milo disease in sorghum is caused by isolates of the soil-borne fungus Periconia circinata that produce PC-toxin. Susceptibility to milo disease is conditioned by a single, semi-dominant gene, termed Pc. The susceptible allele (Pc) converts to a resistant form (pc) spontaneously at a gametic frequen...

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Veröffentlicht in:Theoretical and applied genetics 2007-04, Vol.114 (6), p.961-970
Hauptverfasser: Nagy, Ervin D, Lee, Tso-Ching, Ramakrishna, Wusirika, Xu, Zijun, Klein, Patricia E, SanMiguel, Phillip, Cheng, Chiu-Ping, Li, Jingling, Devos, Katrien M, Schertz, Keith, Dunkle, Larry, Bennetzen, Jeffrey L
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Milo disease in sorghum is caused by isolates of the soil-borne fungus Periconia circinata that produce PC-toxin. Susceptibility to milo disease is conditioned by a single, semi-dominant gene, termed Pc. The susceptible allele (Pc) converts to a resistant form (pc) spontaneously at a gametic frequency of 10-³ to 10-⁴. A high-density genetic map was constructed around the Pc locus using DNA markers, allowing the Pc gene to be delimited to a 0.9 cM region on the short arm of sorghum chromosome 9. Physically, the Pc-region was covered by a single BAC clone. Sequence analysis of this BAC revealed twelve gene candidates. Several of the predicted genes in the region are homologous to disease resistance loci, including one NBS-LRR resistance gene analogue that is present in multiple tandem copies. Analysis of pc isolines derived from Pc/Pc sorghum suggests that one or more members of this NBS-LRR gene family are the Pc genes that condition susceptibility.
ISSN:0040-5752
1432-2242
DOI:10.1007/s00122-006-0481-1