Abstract
A major rust resistance gene has been identified in a self-progeny of the sugarcane cultivar R570. Until now, this gene was known to be linked to a marker revealed by the sugarcane probe CDSR29 but unassigned to any linkage group of the current genetic map. We used synteny relationships between sugarcane and three other grasses in an attempt to saturate the region around this rust resistance gene. Comparison of sugarcane, sorghum, maize and rice genetic maps led to the identification of homoeologous chromosome segments at the extremity of sorghum linkage group D, rice linkage group 2, maize linkage group 4 and in the centromeric region of maize linkage group 5. One hundred and eighty-four heterologous probes were selected and tested for cross-hybridization with sugarcane DNA; 106 produced a good hybridization signal and were hybridized on 88 individuals of the R570 selfed progeny. Two hundred and seventeen single-dose markers were added to the R570 genetic map, of which 66% mapped to linkage group VII, together with the rust resistance gene. This gene has now been mapped to the end of a co-segregating group consisting of 19 RFLP markers. None of the mapped loci were located closer to the gene than CDSR29. The gene thus appears to reside at the edge of a ’’synteny cluster’’ used to describe the different grass genomes.
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