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Two unnecessary powdery mildew resistance genes in a synthetic rye population are neutral on fitness
Authors:H G Welz  T Miedaner  H H Geiger
Institution:(1) Insitute of Plant Breeding, Seed Science, and Population Genetics (350), University of Hohenheim, D-70593 Stuttgart, Germany;(2) State Plant Breeding Institute (720), University of Hohenheim, D-70593 Stuttgart, Germany
Abstract:A synthetic winter rye population was produced with two race-specific powdery mildew resistance genes, one dominant (Rm1) and the other (rm2) recessive, each at a frequency of about 0.50. The population was advanced by open-pollination in an isolated plot under mildew-free conditions for eight years. Samples of generations Syn-0 through Syn-7 were inoculated in the laboratory with two mildew isolates, one avirulent to either resistance gene, the other virulent to Rm1 and avirulent to rm2, to discriminate resistant and susceptible phenotypes. From the proportions of resistant plants, frequencies of Rm1 and rm2 were calculated and the fitness of carriers of resistance alleles was estimated in relation to carriers of susceptibility alleles at the two loci using continuous models and linear regression analyses. Frequencies of the two resistance genes oscillated only weakly over the eight generations. Coefficients of selection against Rm1-and rm2rm2 genotypes were –0.04 and –0.02, respectively, and not significantly different from zero. Thus the two resistance genes were selectively neutral. It is concluded that pyramiding of major powdery mildew resistance genes in rye varieties should not reduce their yield potential in the absence of mildew.
Keywords:Erysiphe graminis f  sp  secalis  fitness costs  powdery mildew  Secale cereale  resistance  rye
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