Genetic and molecular characterization of the maize rp3 rust resistance locus

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Abstract

In maize, the Rp3 gene confers resistance to common rust caused by Puccinia sorghi. Flanking marker analysis of rust-susceptible rp3 variants suggested that most of them arose via unequal crossing over, indicating that rp3 is a complex locus like rpl. The PIC13 probe identifies a nucleotide binding siteleucine-rich repeat (NBS-LRR) gene family that maps to the complex. Rp3 variants show losses of PIC13 family members relative to the resistant parents when probed with PIC13, indicating that the Rp3 gene is a member of this family. Gel blots and sequence analysis suggest that at least 9 family members are at the locus in most Rp3-carrying lines and that at least 5 of these are transcribed in the Rp3-A haplotype. The coding regions of 14 family members, isolated from three different Rp3-carrying haplotypes, had DNA sequence identities from 93 to 99%. Partial sequencing of clones of a BAC contig spanning the rp3 locus in the maize inbred line B73 identified five different PIC13 paralogues in a region of ∼140 kb.

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Webb, C. A., Richter, T. E., Collins, N. C., Nicolas, M., Trick, H. N., Pryor, T., & Hulbert, S. H. (2002). Genetic and molecular characterization of the maize rp3 rust resistance locus. Genetics, 162(1), 381–394. https://doi.org/10.1093/genetics/162.1.381

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