Abstract

Spring wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) breeding goals in western Canada include good agronomic characteristics and good end-use quality, and also moderate to elevated resistance to diseases of economic importance. In this study, we aimed to identify quantitative trait loci (QTL) associated with resistance to common bunt (Tilletia tritici and Tilletia laevis), tan spot (Pyrenophora tritici-repentis), leaf rust (Puccinia triticina), and stripe rust (Puccinia striiformis f. sp. tritici). A total of 167 recombinant inbred lines (RILs) derived from a cross between two spring wheat cultivars, ‘Attila’ and ‘CDC Go’, were evaluated for reactions to the four diseases in nurseries from three to eight environments, and genotyped with the Wheat 90K SNP array and three gene-specific markers (Ppd-D1, Vrn-A1, and Rht-B1). The RILs exhibited transgressive segregation for all four diseases, and we observed several lines either superior or inferior to the parents. Broad-sense heritability varied from 0.25 for leaf rust to 0.48 for common bunt. Using a subset of 1203 informative markers (1200 SNPs and 3 gene-specific markers) and average disease scores across all environments, we identified two QTLs (QCbt.dms-1B.2 and QCbt.dms-3A) for common bunt, and three QTLs each for tan spot (QTs.dms-2B, QTs.dms-2D, and QTs.dms-6B), leaf rust (QLr.dms-2D.1, QLr.dms-2D.2, and QLr.dms-3A), and stripe rust (QYr.dms-3A, QYr.dms-4A, and QYr.dms-5B). Each QTL individually explained between 5.9 and 18.7% of the phenotypic variation, and altogether explained from 21.5 to 26.5% of phenotypic and from 52.2 to 86.0% of the genetic variation. The resistance alleles for all QTLs except one for stripe rust (QYr.dms-5B) were from CDC Go. Some of the QTLs are novel, while others mapped close to QTLs and/or genes reported in other studies.

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