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Method|17 Oct 2023|OPEN
SMRT–AgRenSeq-d in potato (Solanum tuberosum) as a method to identify candidates for the nematode resistance Gpa5
Yuhan Wang1 ,† , Lynn H. Brown1 ,† , Thomas M. Adams2 ,† , Yuk Woon Cheung1 , Jie Li3 , Vanessa Young4 , Drummond T. Todd4 , Miles R. Armstrong1 , Konrad Neugebauer5,8 , Amanpreet Kaur1,6 , Brian Harrower2 , Stan Oome7 and Xiaodan Wang3 , Micha Bayer2 , Ingo Hein,1,2,3 ,
1Division of Plant Sciences at the Hutton, The University of Dundee, Errol Road, Invergowrie, Dundee, DD2 5DA, UK
2The James Hutton Institute, Errol Road, Invergowrie, Dundee, DD2 5DA, UK
3College of Plant Protection, China Agricultural University, Haidian District, Beijing, 100083, China
4James Hutton Limited, The James Hutton Institute, Errol Road, Invergowrie, Dundee, DD2 5DA, UK
5Biomathematics and Statistics Scotland, Errol Road, Invergowrie, Dundee, DD2 5DA, UK
6Crop Research Centre, Teagasc, Oak Park, Carlow R93 XE12, Ireland
7HZPC Research B.V. HZPC, Edisonweg 5, 8501 XG Joure, Netherlands
8Present address: Humboldt University of Berlin, Unter den Linden 6, 10117 Berlin, Germany
*Corresponding author. E-mail: Ingo.Hein@hutton.ac.uk
Yuhan Wang,Lynn H. Brown and Thomas M. Adams contributed equally to the study.

Horticulture Research 10,
Article number: uhad211 (2023)
doi: https://doi.org/10.1093/hr/uhad211
Views: 91

Received: 16 May 2023
Accepted: 10 Oct 2023
Published online: 17 Oct 2023

Abstract

Potato is the third most important food crop in the world. Diverse pathogens threaten sustainable crop production but can be controlled, in many cases, through the deployment of disease resistance genes belonging to the family of nucleotide-binding, leucine-rich-repeat (NLR) genes. To identify effective disease resistance genes in established varieties, we have successfully established SMRT–AgRenSeq in tetraploid potatoes and have further enhanced the methodology by including dRenSeq in an approach that we term SMR–AgRenSeq-d. The inclusion of dRenSeq enables the filtering of candidates after the association analysis by establishing a presence/absence matrix across resistant and susceptible varieties that is translated into an F1 score. Using a SMRT–RenSeq-based sequence representation of the NLRome from the cultivar Innovator, SMRT–AgRenSeq-d analyses reliably identified the late blight resistance benchmark genes Rpi-R1Rpi-R2-likeRpi-R3a, and Rpi-R3b in a panel of 117 varieties with variable phenotype penetrations. All benchmark genes were identified with an F1 score of 1, which indicates absolute linkage in the panel. This method also identified nine strong candidates for Gpa5 that controls the potato cyst nematode (PCN) species Globodera pallida (pathotypes Pa2/3). Assuming that NLRs are involved in controlling many types of resistances, SMRT–AgRenSeq-d can readily be applied to diverse crops and pathogen systems.