Abstract

The Cf-9 gene in the tomato is known to confer resistance against leaf mold disease caused by Cladosporium fulvum, and a gene-based marker targeted to the Cf-9 allele has been widely used as a crop protection approach. However, we found this marker to be misleading in genotyping. Therefore, we developed new single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) and insertion and deletion (InDel) markers targeted to the Cf-9 allele in order to increase genotyping accuracy and facilitate high-throughput screening. The DNA sequences of reported Cf-9, cf-9, Cf-0, and closely related Cf-4 alleles were compared, and two functional and non-synonymous SNPs were found to distinguish the Cf-9 resistance allele from the cf-9, Cf-0, and Cf-4 alleles. An SNP marker including these two SNPs was developed and applied to the genotyping of 33 tomato cultivars by high-resolution melting analysis. Our SNP marker was able to select all three Cf-9 genotypes (resistant, heterozygous, and susceptible alleles). Interestingly, two cultivars were grouped separately from these three genotypes. To further examine this outgroup, we preformed polymerase chain reaction (PCR) on two InDel regions identified by sequence comparison of the Cf-9 and Cf-4 genes. The band patterns revealed that these two cultivars carried Cf-4 rather than Cf-9 alleles and that three cultivars classified in the Cf-9 resistance group actually carried both Cf-9 and Cf-4 genes. To determine whether these genotyping results were consistent with disease resistance phenotypes, we examined the induction of a hypersensitive response by transiently expressing the corresponding effector genes, and found that the results matched perfectly with the genotyping results. These findings indicate that the combination of our SNP and InDel markers allows resistant Cf-9 alleles to be distinguished from cf-9 and Cf-4 alleles, which will be useful for marker-assisted selection of tomato cultivars resistant to C. fulvum.

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