Abstract

The barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) chromosome 1 centromere region contains two adjacent overlapping quantitative trait loci (QTLs) for malting quality traits, and the chromosome 7L subtelomere region contains the stem rust (causal agent Puccinia graminis f.sp. tritici) resistance gene rpg4. To facilitate the saturation mapping of these two target regions, a synteny-based approach was employed. Syntenic relationships between the barley target regions and the rice (Oryza sativa) genome were established through comparative mapping. The barley chromosome 1 centromere region was found to be syntenic with rice chromosome 8 and parts of rice chromosomes 3 and 10. A 6- to 15-fold difference in genetic distance between barley and rice in the syntenic region was observed, owing to the apparent suppressed recombination in the barley chromosome 1 centromere region. Barley chromosome 7L was found to be syntenic with rice chromosome 3. The establishment of synteny with rice in the two target regions allows well-established and characterized rice resources to be utilized in fine mapping and map-based cloning studies.Key words: genome synteny, quantitative trait loci, QTL, disease resistance gene, Triticeae.

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