Abstract

Rice blast is a serious disease caused by the filamentous ascomycetous fungus Magnaporthe oryzae. Incorporating disease resistance genes in rice varieties and characterizing the distribution of M. oryzae isolates form the foundation for enhancing rice blast resistance. In this study, the blast resistance gene Pish was observed to be differentially distributed in the genomes of rice sub-species. Specifically, Pish was present in 80.5% of Geng varieties, but in only 2.3% of Xian varieties. Moreover, Pish conferred resistance against only 23.5% of the M. oryzae isolates from the Geng-planting regions, but against up to 63.2% of the isolates from the Xian-planting regions. Thus, Pish may be an elite resistance gene for improving rice blast resistance in Xian varieties. Therefore, near-isogenic lines (NILs) with Pish and the polygene pyramid lines (PPLs) PPLPish/Pi1, PPLPish/Pi54, and PPLPish/Pi33 in the Xian background Yangdao 6 were generated using a molecular marker-assisted selection method. The results suggested that (1) Pish significantly improved rice blast resistance in Xian varieties, which exhibited considerably improved seedling and panicle blast resistance after Pish was introduced; (2) PPLs with Pish were more effective than the NILs with Pish regarding seedling and panicle blast resistance; (3) the PPL seedling and panicle blast resistance was improved by the complementary and overlapping effects of different resistance genes; and (4) the stability of NIL and PPL resistance varied under different environmental conditions, with only PPLPish/Pi54 exhibiting highly stable resistance in three natural disease nurseries (Jianyang, Jinggangshan, and Huangshan). This study provides new blast resistance germplasm resources and describes a novel molecular strategy for enhancing rice blast resistance.

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