Abstract

BackgroundPowdery mildew (PM) is the most common fungal disease of cucumber and other cucurbit crops, while breeding the PM-resistant materials is the effective way to defense this disease, and the recent development of modern genetics and genomics make us aware of that studying the resistance genes is the essential way to breed the PM high-resistance plant. With the ever increasing throughput of next-generation sequencing (NGS), the development of specific length amplified fragment sequencing (SLAF-seq) as a high-resolution strategy for large-scale de novo SNP discovery is gradually applied for functional gene mining. Here we combined the bulked segregant analysis (BSA) with SLAF-seq to identify candidate genes associated with PM resistance in cucumber.MethodsA segregating population comprising 251 F2 individuals was developed using H136 (female parent) as susceptible parent and BK2 (male parent) as resistance donor. After PMR test, total genomic DNA was prepared from each plant. Systemic genomic analysis of the GC content, repeat sequence, etc. was carried out by prediction software SLAF_Predict to establish condition to ensure the uniformity and density of the molecular markers. After samples were gel purified, SLAFs were generated at Biomarker Technologies Corporation in Beijing. Based on SLAF tags and the PMR test result, the hot region were annotated.ResultsA total of 73,100 high-quality SLAF tags with an average depth of 99.11× were sequenced. Among these, 5,355 polymorphic tags were identified with a polymorphism rate of 7.34 %, including 7.09 % SNPs and other polymorphism types. Finally, 140 associated SLAFs were identified, and two main Hot Regions were detected on chromosome 1 and 6, which contained five genes invovled in defense response, toxin metabolism, cell stress response, and injury response in cucumber.ConclusionsAssociated markers identified by super-BSA in this study, could not only speed up the study of the PMR genes, but also provide a feasible solution for breeding the marker-assisted PMR cucumber. Moreover, this study could also be extended to any other species with reference genome.

Highlights

  • Powdery mildew (PM) is the most common fungal disease of cucumber and other cucurbit crops, while breeding the PM-resistant materials is the effective way to defense this disease, and the recent development of modern genetics and genomics make us aware of that studying the resistance genes is the essential way to breed the PM high-resistance plant

  • Analysis of Specific Length Amplified Fragment (SLAF)-seq data and SLAF tags development DNA samples from the two parents (H136 and BK2)along with the two separate bulks from the F2 population derived from H136 × BK2 was subjected to SLAF-Seq (Fig. 1)

  • Of these high-quality data, ~251 Mb was from Resistant Parent (RP) with 3,293,311 reads, and ~345 Mb were from the Susceptible Parent (SP) with 4,517,307 reads

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Summary

Introduction

Powdery mildew (PM) is the most common fungal disease of cucumber and other cucurbit crops, while breeding the PM-resistant materials is the effective way to defense this disease, and the recent development of modern genetics and genomics make us aware of that studying the resistance genes is the essential way to breed the PM high-resistance plant. It can provoke a variety of symptoms after infection such as talcum-like, whitish and powdery fungal growth [2, 3]. Recent development of modern genetics and genomics make us aware of that studying the resistance genes is the essential in order to breed the PM high-resistance plant. Shanmugasundaram et al took the lead in studying PMR of differentiate hypocotyl and leaf in cucumbers, and they suggested a recessive gene for hypocotyl resistance that played an important role in overall performance of PMR. Shanmugasundaram et al took the lead in studying PMR of differentiate hypocotyl and leaf in cucumbers, and they suggested a recessive gene for hypocotyl resistance that played an important role in overall performance of PMR. [8] Classical genetic analysis found that PMR in cucumber was linked with the D locus for dull fruit color [9,10,11] which has been mapped in cucumber chromosome 5 [12]

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