Award details

New Investigator Award: Rapid identification of genes and pathways that increase resistance to yellow rust disease of wheat

ReferenceBBS/E/T/000GP077
Principal Investigator / Supervisor Dr Ksenia Krasileva
Co-Investigators /
Co-Supervisors
Institution Earlham Institute
DepartmentEarlham Institute Department
Funding typeResearch
Value (£) 3,418
StatusCompleted
TypeInstitute Project
Start date 01/10/2016
End date 31/03/2017
Duration5 months

Abstract

In this project we aim to isolate wheat genes responsible for gain-of-resistance to yellow rust disease of wheat. At The Sainsbury Laboratory and in collaboration with other colleagues, we will test our previously identified lines for broad-spectrum resistance to wheat pathogens (brown rust, powdery mildew, Septoria and wheat blast). We will examine the stage at which pathogen is stopped by microscopy and pre-priming of defence responses by q-PCR. Leveraging the recent advances in wheat genomics at The Genome Analysis Centre, we will establish a rapid approach for mapping wheat genes by exome capture and sequencing reducing the complexity of wheat genome (17 Gb). We will sequence the gene space of the F2 populations of resistant mutants using exome-capture design (86 Mb) and identify mutations linked to resistance with our mutation calling pipelines, providing large amount of marker data. For high-resolution mapping we will design small exome-capture to completely cover the identified chromosomal interval and sequence the region with long-read technology. We will study natural and induced diversity in the target loci in wheat mutagenised populations and 1,000s of wheat cultivar and related species sequenced by other projects along with published yellow rust resistance Genome Wide Association data. Our specific aims include: - Adopt semi-automated assays for quantifying rust growth inside wheat leaves. - Test mutant wheat lines for pre-priming of defence response pathways. - Evaluate selected mutants for the broad-spectrum resistance to multiple pathogens. - Introduce new sources of resistance to the elite UK and European wheat varieties. - Identify markers linked to resistance using wheat exome-capture and mapping-bysequencing approaches. - Clone and validate gene(s) responsible for broad-spectrum resistance to yellow rust. - Identify natural and induced diversity in the resistance loci.

Summary

unavailable
Committee Not funded via Committee
Research TopicsCrop Science, Microbiology, Plant Science
Research PriorityX – Research Priority information not available
Research Initiative X - not in an Initiative
Funding SchemeX – not Funded via a specific Funding Scheme
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