Interaction between powdery mildew and barley with mlo5 mildew resistance

M.F. Lyngkjær, Hanne Østergård

    Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

    Abstract

    Powdery mildew infection of barley with the mlo5 barley powdery mildew resistance gene was examined, using near-isogenic barley lines, with and without mlo5 resistance, and two near-isogenic powdery mildew isolates, HL3/5 and GE3 with high (virulent) or low (avirulent) penetration efficiency on the resistant barley line. in all isolate-host combinations (except GE3 on the resistant barley line), frequency of haustorium formation increased significantly from zero at 11 h after inoculation to a maximum by 13 h, and there was no subsequent increase up to 24 h. In the susceptible barley line, 27% of appressoria from both isolates formed haustoria. Although this was significantly higher than the frequency of haustorium formation (18%) of HL3/5 on the resistant barley line, HL3/5 was much more successful than GE3 (frequency of haustorium formation less than 1%). The fact that HL3/5 did not possess a generally higher ability to penetrate successfully to form haustoria on the susceptible barley line, indicates that HL3/5 did not overcome the mlo5 resistance by being generally more vigorous. Ln the resistant barley line, papillae were larger than in the susceptible line; however, both isolates were associated with papillae of the same diameter at the time of penetration. We suggest that the mlo5 resistant barley line confers two different forms of resistance: isolate-specific and isolate-nonspecific.
    Original languageEnglish
    JournalPlant Pathology
    Volume47
    Issue number3
    Pages (from-to)252-258
    ISSN0032-0862
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 1998

    Fingerprint

    Dive into the research topics of 'Interaction between powdery mildew and barley with mlo5 mildew resistance'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

    Cite this