A review of sources of resistance to turnip yellows virus (TuYV) in Brassica species

A - Papers appearing in refereed journals

Macleod, K., Greer, S. F., Bramham, L., Pimenta, R. J. G., Nellist, C. F., Hackenburg, D., Teakle, G. R., Barker, G. C. and Walsh, J. A. 2023. A review of sources of resistance to turnip yellows virus (TuYV) in Brassica species. Annals of Applied Biology - AAB. 183 (3), pp. 200-208. https://doi.org/10.1111/aab.12842

AuthorsMacleod, K., Greer, S. F., Bramham, L., Pimenta, R. J. G., Nellist, C. F., Hackenburg, D., Teakle, G. R., Barker, G. C. and Walsh, J. A.
Abstract

Turnip yellows virus (TuYV; previously known as beet western yellows virus) causes major diseases of Brassica species worldwide resulting in severe yield-losses in arable and vegetable crops. It has also been shown to reduce the quality of vegetables, particularly cabbage where it causes tip burn. Incidences of 100% have been recorded in commercial crops of winter oilseed rape (Brassica napus) and vegetable crops (particularly Brassica oleracea) in Europe. This review summarises the known sources of resistance to TuYV in B. napus (AACC genome), Brassica rapa (AA genome) and B. oleracea (CC genome). It also proposes names for the quantitative trait loci (QTLs) responsible for the resistances, Turnip Yellows virus Resistance (TuYR), that have been mapped to at least the chromosome level in the different Brassica species. There is currently only one known source of resistance deployed commercially (TuYR1). This resistance is said to have originated in B. rapa and was introgressed into the A genome of oilseed rape via hybridisation with B. oleracea to produce allotetraploid (AACC) plants that were then backcrossed into oilseed rape. It has been utilised in the majority of known TuYV-resistant oilseed rape varieties. This has placed significant selection pressure for resistance-breaking mutations arising in TuYV. Further QTLs for resistance to TuYV (TuYR2-TuYR9) have been mapped in the genomes of B. napus, B. rapa and B. oleracea and are described here. QTLs from the latter two species have been introgressed into allotetraploid plants, providing for the first time, combined resistance from both the A and the C genomes for deployment in oilseed rape. Introgression of these new resistances into commercial oilseed rape and vegetable brassicas can be accelerated using the molecular markers that have been developed. The deployment of these resistances should lessen selection pressure for resistance-breaking isolates of TuYV and thereby prolong the effectiveness of each other and extant resistance.

KeywordsBrassica; QTL; Turnip yellows virus; TuYR; TuYV; Quantitative resistance
Year of Publication2023
JournalAnnals of Applied Biology - AAB
Journal citation183 (3), pp. 200-208
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1111/aab.12842
Open accessPublished as ‘gold’ (paid) open access
FunderBiotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council
Funder project or codeBB/T004193/1
BB/S506783/1
BB/M017923/1
BB/M017206/1
BB/I017410/1
Publisher's version
Output statusPublished
Publication dates
Online31 May 2023
Publication process dates
Accepted16 May 2023
PublisherWiley
ISSN0003-4746

Permalink - https://repository.rothamsted.ac.uk/item/98y97/a-review-of-sources-of-resistance-to-turnip-yellows-virus-tuyv-in-brassica-species

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