In China, wheat stripe rust, caused by Puccinia striiformis f. sp. tritici, is one of the most destructive diseases of wheat and can cause severe yield losses when susceptible cultivars are grown and weather conditions are favorable for the disease. Wheat stripe rust most frequently affects the winter wheat growing areas in Northwest, Southwest, and North China, and the spring wheat growing areas in Northwest China. In the 2001-2002 growing season, a widespread stripe rust epidemic affected about 6.6 million hectares of wheat in 11 provinces: Si-chuan, Chongqing, eastern Gansu, southern and western Shaanxi, southern and central Ningxia, Yunnan, Guizhou, Hubei, Henan, southern and central Hebei, and Shandong. The epidemic could be attributed to relatively warm weather from November 2001 to March 2002, high frequencies of stripe rust races CYR31 and CYR32, and widely grown susceptible cultivars. Race CYR31 was virulent on the Chinese differential cultivars Trigo Eureka, Fulhard, Lutescens 128, Mentana, Virgilio, Abbondanza, Early Premium, Funo, Danish 1, Fengchan 3, Lovrin 13, Shui-yuan 11, Lovrin 10, and Hybrid 46. Race CYR32 had all the virulence factors of CYR31, plus virulences on Chinese differential cultivars Jubilejina 2 and Kangyin 655, i.e., CYR32 was virulent on all differential cultivars, except Zhong 4. When tested on the world and European differential and some other resistant genotypes, CYR32 was virulent on Chinese 166 (Yr1), Heines VII (Yr2, Yr25, and YrHVII), Vilmorin 23 (Yr3a and Yr4a), Heines Kolben (Yr6 and YrHK), Lee (Yr7, Yr22, and Yr23), Clement (Yr9, Yr25, YrCle), VPM1 (Yr17), Selkirk (Yr27), Anza (YrA), Carstens V (YrCV1, YrCV2, and YrCV3), Gaby (YrG), Strubes Dickkopf (Yr25), and Suwon 92/Omar (YrSO). Resistance genes in Triticum spelta album (Yr5), Zhong 4, and Moro (Yr10 and YrMor) were effective against all races identified.
Mineral nutrients are essential for plant cell function, and understanding the genetic and physiological basis of mineral concentration is therefore important for the development of nutrient-efficient crop varieties that can cope with a shortage of mineral resources. In the present study, we investigated the profiles of B, Ca, Fe, Cu, Mg, P and Zn concentrations in shoots and analyzed the genetic variation in a rapeseed (Brassica napus) double haploid population at normal and deficient boron (B) levels in hydroponic conditions. Significant correlations between the concentrations of different minerals, such as Ca and Mg, Ca and P, and Cu and Fe, existed in both B environments. A total of 35 quantitative trait loci (QTL) and 74 epistatic interaction pairs for mineral concentrations were identified by whole genome analysis of QTL and epistatic interactions. The individual phenotypic contributions of the QTL ranged from 4.4% to 19.0%, and the total percentage of genetic variance that was due to QTL and epistatic interactions varied from 10.4% to 82.4%. Most of these QTL corresponded specifically to one of the two B conditions except for one stable main-effect P-QTL across the B environments. Three QTL for Ca and Mg were found to co-localize under normal B condition. These results revealed that genetic factors control mineral homeostasis in plants and multigenes involving ion transport are required to regulate mineral balance in plants under conditions of diverse nutrient stress. In addition, 26 genes involved in ion uptake and transport in Arabidopsis thaliana were in silico mapped onto the QTL intervals of B. napus by comparative genomic analysis. These candidate orthologous genes in B. napus allowed the selection of genes involved in the controlling mineral concentration that may account for the identified QTL.
We have classified 11 species recently recognized as belonging to the genus Elymus into a resurrected and legitimate genus Campeiostachys Drobov according to the International Code of Botanical Nomenclature. Our action is based on the rationale of monophyly, discrimination, and practicality discussed in detail. Currently Elymus contains a vast number of species with different genomes which often, but not always, can be differentiated by cytological and molecular features, but are difficult to separate by traditional morphology, although an effort to do so is detailed and discussed. This difficulty can be attributed to the dominance effect of a particular genome on the other genome(s) present. Campeiostachys, with genome constitution StStHHYY, is a recent addition to a number of genera recently segregated out of Elymus, i.e. Douglasdeweya (StStPP), Kengyilia (StStPPYY), and Roegneria (StStYY, StStStStYY). A key to Campeiostachys taxa is provided, along with taxa descriptions, distribution, nomenclature, and cytology. Nineteen nomenclatural novelties, or combinations, resulted from this work, 10 species names, and nine varietal names.
Cotyledon, hypocotyl or root explants of 7-dayold broccoli seedlings were cultured on Murashige and Skoog (MS) agar or liquid medium supplemented with 1.0 mg l -1 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4-D). The frequency of direct somatic embryo formation was 100% when root explants were cultured in liquid medium. Histological analysis indicated that somatic embryos were initiated directly from the pericycle cell layers of root explants as early as 1 day after liquid culture. Genotype did not affect the frequency of somatic embryo formation or the number of somatic embryos per explant. All broccoli genotypes examined had 100% somatic embryo induction efficiency, and the number of somatic embryos per 0.8 mm root segment ranged from 22.9 in 'Luhui' to 26.0 in 'Haizi'.The number of normally developed somatic embryos in culture increased with increasing 2,4-D concentration. Plantlet regeneration frequency was the highest (73.3%) when germinated plantlets were transferred to 1/2 strength MS agar medium containing 1.0 mg l -1 6-benzyladenine (BA). When regenerated plantlets were transferred to a greenhouse, approximately 75% survived and there were no morphological differences between regenerated plants and seed-derived controls. The protocols established in this study will benefit large-scale vegetative propagation and transformation-based genetic improvement of broccoli.
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