Abstract

Soybean cyst nematode (SCN) (Heterodera glycines Ichinohe) is the most important pathogen in soybean production worldwide and causes substantial yield losses. An apparent narrow genetic base of SCN resistance was observed in current elite soybean cultivars, and searching for novel SCN resistance genes as well as novel resistance sources rather than focusing on the two important genes rhg1 and Rhg4 has become another major objective in soybean research. In the present paper we report a 1,477 bp Hs1pro-1 homolog, named GmHs1pro-1. This gene was cloned from soybean variety Wenfeng 7 based on information for Hs1pro-1, a beet cyst nematode resistance gene in sugar beet. It has two domains, Hs1pro-1_N and Hs1pro-1_C, both of which are believed to confer resistance to nematodes. Of the 1,477 bp sequence in GmHs1pro-1, an open reading frame of 1,314 bp, encoding a protein with 437 amino acids, was flanked by a 5′-untranslated region of 27 bp and a 3′-untranslated region of 135 bp. Fourteen single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) were observed in 44 soybean accessions including 23 wild soybeans, 8 landraces, and 13 soybean varieties (or lines), among which 5 in wild soybeans and 3 in landrace accessions were unique. Sequence diversity analysis on the 44 soybean accessions showed π = 0.00168 and θ = 0.00218 for GmHs1pro-1; landraces had the highest diversity, followed by wild soybeans, with varieties (or lines) having the lowest. Although we did not detect a significant effect of selection on GmHs1pro-1 in the three populations, sequence diversity, unique SNPs, and phylogenetic analysis indicated a slight domestication bottleneck and an intensive selection bottleneck. High sequence diversity, more unique SNPs, and broader representation across the phylogenetic tree in wild soybeans and landraces indicated that wild collections and landrace accessions are invaluable germplasm for broadening the genetic base of elite soybean varieties resistant to SCN.

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