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ARS Home » Southeast Area » Stuttgart, Arkansas » Dale Bumpers National Rice Research Center » Research » Publications at this Location » Publication #248925

Title: New Marker Development for the Rice Blast Resistance Gene Pi-km

Author
item Costanzo, Stefano
item Jia, Yulin

Submitted to: Rice Technical Working Group Meeting Proceedings
Publication Type: Proceedings
Publication Acceptance Date: 1/15/2010
Publication Date: 2/22/2010
Citation: Costanzo, S., Jia, Y. 2010. New Marker Development for the Rice Blast Resistance Gene Pi-km. In: Proceedigs 33rd Rice Technical Working Group Meetings, February 22-24, 2010, Biloxi, MS. CDROM.

Interpretive Summary:

Technical Abstract: The blast resistance (R) gene Pi-km protects rice against specific races of the fungal pathogen Magnaporthe oryzae. The use of blast R genes remains the most cost-effective method of disease control. To facilitate the breeding process, we developed a Pi-km specific molecular marker. For this purpose, we explored the existing sequence diversity for alleles of the two genes responsible for the Pi-km specificity in several U.S. rice cultivars. In 15 rice cultivars we found that the majority of nucleotide polymorphism was associated almost exclusively with the Pi-km1 allele. The amino acid variation was localized within the predicted coiled-coil domain of the Pi-km1 translated products. In contrast, the sequence of Pi-km2 alleles was highly conserved, even within cultivars more distantly related. Furthermore, the cultivars blast inoculation reaction patterns, as well as the two genes phylogenetic analysis, revealed a good correlation with known Pi-k genes (-k/ -kh/ -km/ -ks/ -kp) historically reported for some of these cultivars. Based on these findings, specific primer sets have been designed to discriminate among the various Pi-km sequence variants.