The inheritance of virulence of Phytophthora infestans to potato

Autor: D. S. Shaw, S. M. Al-Kherb, R. C. Shattock, C. Fininsa
Rok vydání: 1995
Předmět:
Zdroj: Plant Pathology. 44:552-562
ISSN: 1365-3059
0032-0862
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-3059.1995.tb01677.x
Popis: Of 31 matings between isolates of P. infestans from several countries, six yielded enough progeny for analysis of inheritance of the virulence phenotype. Virulence was determined in vitro after inoculation of detached leaflets of nine differential lines of potato, each carrying a different gene for resistance. Parents of three matings carried an isozyme marker (glucosephosphate isomerase) which allowed the hybridity of most progeny to be confirmed. Apparently non-hybrid progeny from all three matings were probably selfs or apomicts ; these were discarded. The inheritance of virulence in two sib-cross and one backcross family was determined. Patterns of inheritance in F 1 and F 2 indicated the presence of a gene-for-gene interaction in which alleles of a single locus in the pathogen conditioned virulence or avirulence on each differential. Although the hypothesis that avirulence alleles were dominant and virulence alleles were recessive was supported by many of the data, unexpected segregations were obtained. Alternative hypotheses to explain the latter included low aggressiveness in a proportion of the progeny, a second locus inhibiting avirulence in one parent, a different locus in each parent determining avirulence/virulence on one R-gene, and dominance of some alleles determining virulence. Avirulent field isolates appeared to be heterozygous (Avravr) rather than homozygous (AvrAvr) at avirulence loci. A somatic segregation from avirulence to virulence at three avirulence loci was postulated for one parental isolate. Evidence for linkage of these three loci suggested that the observed somatic segregation resulted from mitotic crossing-over.
Databáze: OpenAIRE