Litcius/Paper detail

Effective Pollen-Fertility Restoration Is the Basis of Hybrid Rye Production and Ergot Mitigation

Thomas Miedaner, Viktor Korzun, Peer Wilde

2022Plants20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Hybrid rye breeding leads to considerably higher grain yield and a higher revenue to the farmer. The basis of hybrid seed production is the CMS-inducing Pampa (P) cytoplasm derived from an Argentinean landrace and restorer-to-fertility (Rf) genes. European sources show an oligogenic inheritance, with major and minor Rf genes, and mostly result in low-to-moderate pollen-fertility levels. This results in higher susceptibility to ergot (Claviceps purpurea) because rye pollen and ergot spores are in strong competition for the unfertilized stigma. Rf genes from non-adapted Iranian primitive rye and old Argentinean cultivars proved to be most effective. The major Rf gene in these sources was localized on chromosome 4RL, which is also a hotspot of restoration in other Triticeae. Marker-based introgression into elite rye materials led to a yield penalty and taller progenies. The Rfp1 gene of IRAN IX was fine-mapped, and two linked genes of equal effects were detected. Commercial hybrids with this gene showed a similar low ergot infection when compared with population cultivars. The task of the future is to co-adapt these exotic Rfp genes to European elite gene pools by genomic-assisted breeding.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyHybridIntrogressionPollenPopulationHybrid seedHeterosisCultivarAgronomyGeneBotanyGeneticsSociologyDemographyPlant and fungal interactionsBioenergy crop production and managementLegume Nitrogen Fixing Symbiosis