Abstract

Aflatoxin contamination of maize (Zea mays L.) grain caused by Aspergillus flavus is a serious health hazard to animals and humans. Development of maize varieties resistant to A. flavus infection and/or aflatoxin production can reduce this contamination. This study was conducted to identify quantitative trait loci (QTL) associated with resistance to A. flavus infection. A recombinant inbred line population was developed derived from RA, a maize inbred line resistant to A. flavus infection, and M53, a susceptible inbred line. After inoculation with A. flavus under controlled conditions, the kernels from each plant line grown in three different environments were evaluated for infection level. Categorical inoculation data were collected for each plant line based on the percentage of the kernel surface covered by fungal conidia. Significant genotypic variation in infection level was observed in all environments. Based on a genetic map containing 916 polymorphic simple sequence repeat and single nucleotide polymorphism markers, the resistance QTL were initially analyzed by composite interval mapping (CIM) separately for each environment. One QTL in bin 5.03 was detected in all environments, and seven other QTL were identified in one environment. Next, a mixed model based on CIM (MCIM) was employed for QTL analysis using data from the three environments simultaneously. Significant epistasis and epistasis × environment interaction to A. flavus infection were revealed. The QTL in bin 5.03 was repeatedly detected by the MCIM. This QTL explained the largest phenotypic variation among all of the detected QTL and could be considered as a major QTL for use in breeding for A. flavus resistance.

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