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Stable and Extreme Resistance to Common Scab of Potato Obtained Through Somatic Cell Selection

journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-16, 23:37 authored by Calum WilsonCalum Wilson, Robert TeggRobert Tegg, Wilson, AJ, Luckman, G, Alieta EylesAlieta Eyles, Yuan, ZQ, Hingston, LH, Conner, AJ
Somatic cell selection with thaxtomin A as a positive selection agent was used to isolate variants of potato cv. Russet Burbank with strong to extreme resistance to common scab. Glasshouse and field trials identified 51 variants with significantly reduced disease incidence (frequency of infected tubers) and severity (tuber lesion coverage) compared with the parent cultivar. The most promising variants exhibited extreme disease resistance, rarely showing lesions, which were invariably superficial and shallower than those on the parent. Resistance traits were consistently expressed both in 10 glasshouse and two field trials at different locations, with varied inoculum and disease pressure. Disease-resistant variants differed in their response to thaxtomin A in tuber slice bioassays. Of 23 variants tested, 10 showed reduced thaxtomin A susceptibility, with the remaining 13 responding similar to that of the parent. Thus, toxin tolerance was not the only factor responsible for observed disease resistance; however, four of the five most disease-resistant variants had enhanced thaxtomin A tolerance, suggesting that this factor is important in the expression of strong disease resistance. Pathogenicity and toxin tolerance remained stable over a 6-year period, demonstrating that selected phenotypes were robust and genetic changes stable. The majority of disease-resistant variants had tuber yields equivalent to the parent cultivar in glasshouse trials. This suggests that selection for disease resistance was not associated with negative tuber attributes and that certain variants may have commercial merit, worthy of further agronomic testing. © 2010 The American Phytopathological Society.

History

Publication title

Phytopathology

Volume

100

Issue

5

Pagination

460-467

ISSN

0031-949X

Department/School

Tasmanian Institute of Agriculture (TIA)

Publisher

American Phytopathological Society

Place of publication

United States

Repository Status

  • Restricted

Socio-economic Objectives

Field grown vegetable crops

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