Monday, 7 November 2005
6

Identifying Novel R-Genes in Rice Wild Relatives with Microsatellite Markers.

Georgia C. Eizenga1, Hesham A. Agrama2, and Fleet N. Lee2. (1) USDA-ARS DB Nat. Rice Res. Ctr., PO Box 1090, 2890 Hwy. 130 E, Stuttgart, AR 72160-1090, (2) U Arkansas, Rice Res. & Ext. Ctr., 2900 Hwy 130 East, Stuttgart, AR 72160

Rice wild relatives (Oryza spp.) are an important source of novel Resistance-genes for rice improvement. Rice sheath blight, caused by Rhizotonia solani, and leaf blast, caused by Magnaportha grisea, are major fungal diseases of cultivated rice (O. sativa) in the USA and of irrigated rice worldwide. To identify novel resistance genes, approximately 50 accessions representing the species O. alta, O. australiensis, O. barthii, O. glaberrima, O. glumapatula, O. latifolia, O. meridionolis, O. nivara, O. officinalis, and O. rufipogon, were screened for reaction to M. grisea and R. solani. Ten different blast races, each represented by a single isolate of M. grisea, and a single isolate of R. solani were used in the greenhouse disease screening. These accessions were genotyped with approximately 200 SSR markers and data from 138 SSR markers used to conduct genetic distance and cluster analysis on these accessions with the PowerMarker program. Preliminary data indicated a close relationship between many O. barthii, O. nivara and O. rufipogon accessions, the progenitors of cultivated rice. One O. nivara accession clustered closely with five U.S. rice cultivars included for comparison. Clustering was more distant between U.S. cultivars and accessions of the remaining Oryza spp. that were not progenitor species. Associations between the aforementioned SSR markers and the disease reactions of the Oryza spp. accessions to blast races and sheath blight also were delineated using the PowerMarker program. Preliminary analysis with eight blast races identified 34 markers associated with two or more blast races. These associations will be used to identify the regions where novel R-genes are located. To date, six accessions are being backcrossed to adapted U.S. germplasm for mapping population development to further analyze the R-genes and to select germplasm useful to U.S. rice breeding programs.

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