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The Molecular Basis of Resistance in Rice to the Parasite striga Hermonthica


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The aim of this project is to identify key genes involved in resistance of rice cultivar APS1101 to Striga hermonthica (using the whole genome array Rice Gene Chip).


Striga species are parasitic weeds that are widespread constraints to the production of staple cereal crops in semiarid areas, principally attacking maize, sorghum, finger millet and upland rice. They have been estimated to infest some 40 per cent of the cereal producing areas of sub-Saharan Africa; Striga hermonthica alone may now infest over 10 million hectares and those most severely affected are subsistence farmers. Loss of grain yield from parasitized cereal crops is difficult to estimate with any reliability due to variations in soil fertility, infestation levels and different sensitivity of local varieties. The aim of this project is to identify key genes involved in resistance of rice cultivar APS1101 to Striga hermonthica (using the whole genome array Rice Gene Chip).

Understanding the genetic basis of post attachment resistance to Striga species

Understanding the molecular basis of host resistance to Striga species is a critical step in the identification of genes that can be used for improving crop productivity either via biotechnology based approaches such as crop transformation or via the development of molecular markers for use in marker assisted selection programmes. We have screened the model cereal rice for post attachment resistance to Striga hermonthica and we have identified cultivars that exhibit varying degrees of resistance to this parasite. In order to begin the identification of the molecular genetic basis of post-attachment resistance in rice we have taken two complementary approaches.

- First we have carried out a QTL analysis using a mapping population (Nipponbare/Kasalath//Nipponbare) of Backcross Inbred Lines.
- second we have profiled changes in gene expression in roots of a susceptible and resistant cultivar of rice following infection by S. hermonthica.

QTL explaining a large proportion of the resistance were discovered on five chromosomes; 4 alleles providing resistance from Nipponbare and 1 allele from Kasalath. Each of these QTL were statistically significant at the stringent genome-wide P 0.001 threshold. All of these QTL were of magnitude in excess of the usual definition of a major gene, thus although the resistance trait is polygenic, it is likely that this may indicate a few genes of major effect. To dissect the Nipponbare QTL into their underlying genetic determinants, an analysis of changes in gene expression in Striga-infected roots has been carried out using the Affymetrix whole genome rice oligonucleotide array. To date a small number of genes have been identified that are significantly differentially expressed within the major resistance QTL; such genes are potential candidates for Striga resistance and could also be used to develop molecular markers of resistance.



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