Abstract

Wheat is a major nutritional cereal crop that has economic and strategic value worldwide. The sustainability of this extraordinary crop is facing critical challenges globally, particularly leaf rust disease, which causes endless problems for wheat farmers and countries and negatively affects humanity’s food security. Developing effective marker-assisted selection programs for leaf rust resistance in wheat mainly depends on the availability of deep mining of resistance genes within the germplasm collections. This is the first study that evaluated the leaf rust resistance of 50 Egyptian wheat varieties at the adult plant stage for two successive seasons and identified the absence/presence of 28 leaf rust resistance (Lr) genes within the studied wheat collection. The field evaluation results indicated that most of these varieties demonstrated high to moderate leaf rust resistance levels except Gemmeiza 1, Gemmeiza 9, Giza162, Giza 163, Giza 164, Giza 165, Sids 1, Sids 2, Sids 3, Sakha 62, Sakha 69, Sohag 3 and Bany Swif 4, which showed fast rusting behavior. On the other hand, out of these 28 Lr genes tested against the wheat collection, 21 Lr genes were successfully identified. Out of 15 Lr genes reported conferring the adult plant resistant or slow rusting behavior in wheat, only five genes (Lr13, Lr22a, Lr34, Lr37, and Lr67) were detected within the Egyptian collection. Remarkedly, the genes Lr13, Lr19, Lr20, Lr22a, Lr28, Lr29, Lr32, Lr34, Lr36, Lr47, and Lr60, were found to be the most predominant Lr genes across the 50 Egyptian wheat varieties. The molecular phylogeny results also inferred the same classification of field evaluation, through grouping genotypes characterized by high to moderate leaf rust resistance in one cluster while being highly susceptible in a separate cluster, with few exceptions.

Highlights

  • Introduction(bread wheat) is an essential grain worldwide, including Egypt

  • The mining, characterization, and distribution of leaf rust resistance (Lr) genes within certain wheat genotypes/collections are crucial for developing new wheat-resistant genotypes

  • Gene pyramiding of Lr genes with the aid of molecular markers is necessary for ensuring the long-term sustainability of leaf rust resistance in Egyptian wheat varieties

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Summary

Introduction

(bread wheat) is an essential grain worldwide, including Egypt. It provides humanity their protein requirements [1,2]. The requirement for wheat grains increased every year and is predicted to reach 60% by 2050 [3]. The agriculture of most regions has experienced adverse effects from climate change, which constitutes the main cause of biotic and abiotic stresses. Climate change (drought, high temperatures, pests, floods, storm, and disease epidemics) greatly affects crop production

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