Abstract

Bean rust is one of the major diseases of the common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris) reported in Sri Lanka and at the global level. This study aimed to develop rust-resistant snap bean breeding lines via gene pyramiding assisted by molecular markers. Resistant sources; PI 181996, BelMiNeb-RMR-8, and BelDakMi-RMR-19, enriched with the rust-resistant genes Ur-3 and Ur-11, were selected as donor parents to obtain a wide range of resistance to the rust pathogen. Resistant genotypes were crossed with popular local varieties Kappetipola nil and Galpalama Kalu (Capri) to introgress Ur-3 and Ur-11 resistant genes. Successive F1, F2, and BC (backcross) generations were obtained with the self-pollination and backcrossing processes. Standard phenotypic disease screening methods were applied to identify resistant lines. Phenotypically resistant plants obtained from these crosses were tested with sequence-characterized amplified region (SCAR) markers linked to two rust-resistant genes: SK 14 (linked to Ur-3) and SI 19 (linked to Ur-11). Molecular marker SI-19 showed higher reproducibility (50% to 80%) with the availability of relevant banding patterns for phenotypically resistant F1, F2, and BC1 progenies. However, SK 14 showed lower reproducibility (30–60%) for the same progenies. Approximately 450 genotypes introgressed with rust-resistant genes (Ur-3 and Ur-11)were produced. Among them, four advanced resistant lines obtained from the different cross combinations (Kappetipola nil x BelDakMi-RMR-19, Galpalama Kalu x BelMiNeb RMR-8, Kappetipola nil x PI 181996, and Kappetipola nil x BelMiNeb RMR-8) with preferred agronomic characters were selected for further variety development. All new genotypes will be important for future bean-resistant breeding programs in Sri Lanka.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call