Abstract
AbstractPlants have powerful defence mechanisms, and extensive immune receptor repertoires, yet crop monocultures are prone to epidemic diseases. Rice is susceptible to many diseases, such as rice blast caused byMagnaporthe oryzae. Varietal resistance of rice to blast relies on intracellular nucleotide binding, leucine-rich repeat (NLR) receptors that recognize specific pathogen molecules and trigger immune responses. In the Yuanyang terraces in south-west China, rice landraces rarely show severe losses to disease whereas commercial inbred lines show pronounced field susceptibility. Here, we investigate within-landrace NLR sequence diversity of nine rice landraces and eleven modern varieties ofindica, japonicaandaususing complexity reduction techniques. We find that NLRs display high sequence diversity in landraces, consistent with balancing selection, and that balancing selection at NLRs is more pervasive in landraces than modern varieties. Notably, modern varieties lack many ancient NLR haplotypes that are retained in some landraces. Our study emphasises the value of standing genetic variation that is maintained in farmer landraces as resource to make modern crops and agroecosystems less prone to disease.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
3 articles.
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