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Article|03 Jan 2024|OPEN
Transgressive segregation, hopeful monsters, and phenotypic selection drove rapid genetic gains and breakthroughs in predictive breeding for quantitative resistance to Macrophomina in strawberry 
Steven J. Knapp1 , ,† , Glenn S. Cole1 ,† , Dominique D.A. Pincot1 ,† , Christine Jade Dilla-Ermita1,2 , Marta Bjornson1 , Randi A. Famula1 , Thomas R. Gordon3 , Julia M. Harshman1 and Peter M. Henry2 , Mitchell J. Feldmann,1 ,†
1Department of Plant Sciences, University of California, Davis, One Shields Avenue, Davis, CA 95616, USA
2Crop Improvement and Protection Research, USDA-ARS, 1636 E. Alisal Street, CA 93905, USA
3Department of Plant Pathology, University of California, One Shields Avenue, Davis, CA 95616, USA
*Corresponding author. E-mail: sjknapp@ucdavis.edu
Steven J. Knapp,Glenn S. Cole,Dominique D.A. Pincot,Mitchell J. Feldmann contributed equally to the study.

Horticulture Research 11,
Article number: uhad289 (2024)
doi: https://doi.org/10.1093/hr/uhad289
Views: 220

Received: 20 Sep 2023
Accepted: 17 Dec 2023
Published online: 03 Jan 2024

Abstract

Two decades have passed since the strawberry (Fragaria x ananassa) disease caused by Macrophomina phaseolina, a necrotrophic soilborne fungal pathogen, began surfacing in California, Florida, and elsewhere. This disease has since become one of the most common causes of plant death and yield losses in strawberry. The Macrophomina problem emerged and expanded in the wake of the global phase-out of soil fumigation with methyl bromide and appears to have been aggravated by an increase in climate change-associated abiotic stresses. Here we show that sources of resistance to this pathogen are rare in gene banks and that the favorable alleles they carry are phenotypically unobvious. The latter were exposed by transgressive segregation and selection in populations phenotyped for resistance to Macrophomina under heat and drought stress. The genetic gains were immediate and dramatic. The frequency of highly resistant individuals increased from 1% in selection cycle 0 to 74% in selection cycle 2. Using GWAS and survival analysis, we found that phenotypic selection had increased the frequencies of favorable alleles among 10 loci associated with resistance and that favorable alleles had to be accumulated among four or more of these loci for an individual to acquire resistance. An unexpectedly straightforward solution to the Macrophomina disease resistance breeding problem emerged from our studies, which showed that highly resistant cultivars can be developed by genomic selection per se or marker-assisted stacking of favorable alleles among a comparatively small number of large-effect loci.