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CSG 15 DEPARTMENT for ENVIRONMENT, FOOD and RURAL AFFAIRS Research and Development Final Project Report (Not to be used for LINK projects) Two hard copies of this form should be returned to: Research Policy and International Division, Final Reports Unit DEFRA, Area 301 Cromwell House, Dean Stanley Street, London, SW1P 3JH. An electronic version should be e-mailed to [email protected] Project title Identify markers associated with crown rust resistance in ryegrass DEFRA project code LS3618 Contractor organisation and location IGER Plas Gogerddan, Aberystwyth, Ceredigion SY23 1JJ Total DEFRA project costs Project start date £ 226,808 01/07/00 Project end date 30/06/03 Executive summary (maximum 2 sides A4) The overall aim of this project was to advance our knowledge of the genetics of resistance to crown rust in ryegrass so that plant breeders can make better use of resistant germplasm. This disease is the most important fungal disease of perennial ryegrass in southern Britain and Western Europe. There is some concern that it is becoming more prevalent. This might be a reflection of climate change rather than the pathogen becoming more virulent. The disease reduces both the nutritional quality of the herbage and fitness of infected plants, and ultimately affects sward composition. Using plant natural defences is the most cost effective and environmentally acceptable method of controlling crown rust and this is given a high priority by plant breeders. The heterogeneous nature of ryegrass has made it difficult in the past to make significant advances in our understanding of the genetics of resistance to crown rust. The development of molecular genetic marker technologies in recent years provides us with the tools to extend our knowledge. Objective 1 Identify quantitative trait loci (QTL) for crown rust resistance in perennial ryegrass. In the first part of the project a perennial ryegrass mapping family, developed at IGER with BBSRC funding, and which was segregating for resistance to crown rust was used to identify and locate resistance genes (QTL). Previous work funded by DEFRA showed that temperature had a significant effect on the resistance of different cultivars, therefore, firstly we tested the mapping family at 10, 15, 20 and 25°C. The resistance of the plants was estimated on a 0-4 scale depending on the type of symptoms observed on several leaves on each plant (the reaction types). There were some 245 markers available in the mapping family for linkage to resistance. The statistical package used to analyse the data estimates the likelihood (lod value) that a gene is linked to specific marker on each chromosome (linkage group) and this can be plotted as a graph. Over all temperatures QTL were located on four linkage groups and the resistance was of a quantitative nature. Most of the genes had only a small effect, (responsible for only 7% of the variation) and were sensitive to temperature, but some were effective at all temperatures. The QTL with the highest lod value was on linkage group 5 and was identified in all the tests. CSG 15 (Rev. 6/02) 1 Project title Identify markers associated with crown rust resistance in ryegrass DEFRA project code LS3618 Four crown rust isolates with different levels of virulence were isolated and characterised. When replicated sets of the mapping family were inoculated with these isolates, it was shown that there were QTL segregating in the mapping population which were sensitive to different isolates. The four isolates could be broadly assigned to two groups based on the QTL analysis and distribution of R and S plants. For the first group, the same QTL were identified as in the first experiment, except that one on linkage group 3 differentiated between the two isolates. A number of QTL were also identified for the more virulent isolates but the effect they had on resistance was, by definition, very small. We suggest that they are responsible for subtle differences between intermediate and susceptible reaction types. The most noticeable difference was the ineffectiveness of the QTL at 0cM on linkage group 2 against the more virulent isolates. As in the previous test the highest lod values were on linkage group 5. This is the first report of pathogen isolate specific QTL in perennial ryegrass. Having tested for differences between isolates and temperature individually, we then compared the results of testing the mapping family with an isolate from each of the two virulence groups at high and low temperatures (10 and 25°C). There were fewer susceptible plants at 10°C with both isolates but temperature had a greater effect on the virulent isolate. One QTL on each linkage group 2 and 3 only occurred at the lower temperature. In contrast, the QTL which had previously given high lod scores on linkage group 5 was only just above the threshold value on one scoring date at 10°C but gave high values at 25°C. Thus the differential sensitivity of perennial ryegrass resistance genes to temperature appears to be isolate dependent. Other mapping families developed at IGER were tested to identify suitable material for future work, but none of these were segregating for crown rust resistance. The results from this project supports the work on producing improved varieties of perennial ryegrass by providing knowledge on the inheritance of resistance to crown rust and how it might be exploited in the future. This will assist in maintaining an output of new ryegrass varieties which in itself help to maintain the sustainability of UK livestock production. Objective 2 - Identify molecular markers associated with crown rust resistance introgressed into Italian ryegrass from meadow fescue. Two BC3 introgression lines of Italian ryegrass were developed which contained a segment of chromosome from meadow fescue carrying resistance to crown rust. The purpose of this project was to determine whether the resistance was on this segment and to identify molecular markers linked to the resistance gene. The presence of the meadow fescue segment was identified using a chromosome painting technique. This showed that, in one of the lines, the resistant plants had the introgressed segment but that it was absent in the susceptible ones. In contrast, in the second line some susceptible plants had a segment of fescue chromosome but this was physically smaller than in resistant plants. The first line was clearly not suitable for identifying markers since there was no recombination on the short arm containing the fescue segment. Also, by intercrossing some BC3 genotypes and testing the progeny, the ratio of resistant to susceptible plants confirmed the presence of a single resistance gene. AFLP markers specific to the fescue introgression were identified and a significant proportion mapped close to the resistance gene (i.e. there was no recombination between the marker and the gene). Other markers were also tested on the BC3 line which showed that the introgression was on ryegrass linkage group 5. The results of these tests also provided evidence that suggests that there may be suppressed recombination in this segment. A further generation of backcrossing would be required to determine if the segment size can be reduced without loss of effectiveness. This work has demonstrated that a novel form of disease resistance can be utilised in breeding programmes using a conventional breeding technique in association with molecular markers. It gives plant breeders the choice in the future to exploit this type resistance should sources present in perennial ryegrass become less effective and new types difficult to find. Thus future improvements in quality characteristics of new varieties will be protected and assist in maintaining the sustainability of UK livestock production. CSG 15 (Rev. 6/02) 2 Project title Identify markers associated with crown rust resistance in ryegrass DEFRA project code LS3618 Scientific report (maximum 20 sides A4) Objective 1 Identify quantitative trait loci (QTL) for crown rust resistance in perennial ryegrass. Introduction - Crown rust (Puccinia coronata) is the most important fungal disease of perennial ryegrass (Lolium perenne) in the UK and Western Europe and there are reports that it is becoming more prevalent across Western Europe. It is known to reduce the nutritive value of herbage, so that it is important that new cultivars with higher sugar content have adequate resistance to protect that quality improvement. Although most new cultivars have good levels of resistance, the fungus is continually evolving and new strains can appear which reduce the effectiveness of resistance genes. To keep one step ahead of the pathogen, it is necessary to identify those resistance genes currently deployed in existing cultivars and advanced breeding lines, as well as those in new unexploited sources from wild populations, which are effective against a wide range of crown rust populations. The resistances may be polygenically inherited or controlled by single genes, but until recently very little work has been carried out to determine this. The development of DNA marker technology has made it much easier to study the inheritance of both simple and complex traits. At IGER, an F2 perennial ryegrass family was developed to study the inheritance of water soluble carbohydrate contents of herbage, with funding from BBSRC, and a dense linkage map constructed. This family was found to be segregating for crown rust resistance and has been exploited in the experiments to identify the potentially more durable forms of resistance. A previous DEFRA-funded project showed that temperature affected the expression of resistance to crown rust in perennial ryegrass, with all cultivars being more susceptible at 25˚C than at 10˚C. The genetic nature of temperature sensitivity was explored using this mapping family. It has also been shown that crown rust populations from different regions can vary in their pathogenicity, therefore the possibility of identifying isolates (race) specific resistance genes was tested. Methods & Results Plant material The initial plant material consisted of a family of 183 F2 plants derived from a pair-cross between two plants of two S3 generation inbred lines. These lines were derived from selections from the early flowering and crown rust susceptible cv. Aurora and the late flowering and moderately resistant cv. Perma. Selection from cv. Aurora Inbred (S3) Susceptible to crown rust X Selection from cv. Perma Inbred (S3) Moderate resistance to crown rust F1 Single F1 genotype selfed Segregating F2 family of 183 individuals Genotyping and linkage map The F2 plants had been genotyped for Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphisms (RFLPs), Amplified Fragment Length Polymorphisms (AFLPs), simple sequence repeats (SSRs), single tagged sequences (STSs), isozyme and functional markers. A final linkage map was constructed for 61 RFLPs, 54 AFLPs, 103 SSRs, 11 STSs, 3 isozymes and 13 functional markers onto seven linkage groups aligned to the Triticeae map using JoinMap 2.0 software. This genetic marker data was used in the linkage analyses. Rust isolates CSG 15 (Rev. 6/02) 3 Project title Identify markers associated with crown rust resistance in ryegrass DEFRA project code LS3618 A standard control isolate (isolate 2) was multiplied from a single pustule isolate taken at random from a rust sample collected in the UK. Other isolates were developed by taking single pustules from a bulk population collected from several sites in the United Kingdom and one locality in France. These were tested on various genotypes in the mapping family and two which appeared to be more virulent (isolates 3 & 4) than the control isolate and one which was less virulent (isolate 1) were selected. Rust inoculation Plants were grown in plastic trays consisting of 77 cells each containing an individual clonally propagated plant in a soil-less compost with at least five tillers per cell. A randomised block design was used in all experiments. There were two replicated sets in the temperature and temperature/isolate experiments and four replicates in the isolate experiment. Leaves were inoculated using an aerosol sprayer to spray plants with measured amounts of spores diluted in odourless kerosene. After inoculation the plants were placed in a growth room at 22°C and 100% humidity for 20 h, maintaining the same photoperiod. The plants were then either transferred to growth cabinets (temperature experiments) or to a heated glasshouse set to maintain a minimum temperature of 20°C with supplementary lighting (isolate experiment). The reaction of the plants to infection was assessed on a scale of 0-4 (0 = no visible sign of infection (immune), 0.5 = faint chlorotic spots, 1 = mostly chlorotic spots, 1.5 = chlorotic spots with a few very small pustules (hardly sporulating), 2 = chlorotic spots and a few small to medium sized pustules, 2.5 = less chlorosis than with 2, 3 = medium sized pustules, possibly with some chlorotic spots, 3.5 = medium to large pustules, and 4 = large pustules with hardly any chlorosis surrounding them and profuse sporulation. QTL analysis The Map QTL™ computer program was used to conduct interval mapping on the mean crown rust scores. Both non-parametric and interval mapping were conducted separately on each data set to identify genomic regions associated with rust resistance. For the non-parametric mapping, the Kruskal-Wallis test is used in MapQTL, which ranks individuals according to the quantitative trait. A significance level of P < 0.001 was applied in this study. The probability of linkage of crown rust resistance to a marker position is estimated by calculating a likelihood ratio. This ratio is the likelihood of the observed results if linkage is assumed over the likelihood of the observed results due to independent assortment and is usually called the lod score. A lod threshold of 2.0 was used to identify the presence of a putative QTL in a given genomic region. As the linkage map has been developed significantly during the lifetime of this project, the data has been re-analysed so that some of the conclusions presented here differ slightly from those in previous annual reports. Temperature sensitive QTLs Four sets of the mapping family, each with two replicates, were inoculated with crown rust (isolate 2) and each set placed in one of four identical growth cabinets at 10°C, 15°C, 20°C and 25°C. Individual plants were assessed for crown rust on the first visible sign of infection and at intervals thereafter. Table 1. Mean crown rust scores of an F2 mapping family at 10, 15, 20 and 25°C Assessment 1 2 3 4 5 10°C 0.73 1 1.17 1.22 Temperature 15°C 0.82 1.12 1.25 1.35 20°C 1.08 1.34 1.52 1.67 1.71 25°C 1.52 1.73 1.97 The results confirm the previous reports that perennial ryegrass is more resistant at low temperature; overall there was a gradation in susceptibility from 10 to 25°C (Table 1). There were no major affects of temperature on the identification of QTL, and the results demonstrate the subtle differences which minor genes can have on the expression of resistance. The highest lod scores were found on linkage group 5 with the highest values at 25°C at the earliest assessment times and suggest that this QTL might affect the latent period component of resistance. The lod-likelihood plots were very broad and it was difficult to CSG 15 (1/00) 4 Project title Identify markers associated with crown rust resistance in ryegrass DEFRA project code LS3618 ascertain whether there was more than one QTL on this linkage group. A QTL at 0cM on linkage group 2 also occurred at 10, 15 and 25°C and was just below the threshold value (2.0) at 20°C. Similarly one on linkage group 3 occurred at 10°C, and was just below the threshold at 20 and 25°C. A QTL on linkage group 1 only occurred at 10°C, one on linkage group 6 only at 25°C and one on linkage group 4 at 20°C. Isolate specific resistance Overall the mapping family was more resistant to isolates 1 and 2 (Table 2) with which the distribution of rust scores tended to be bimodal with resistant plants predominant, whereas with isolates 3 and 4 it was skewed towards susceptibility. Table 2. Mean crown rust scores of an F2 mapping family infected with four isolates on three scoring dates Isolates Assessment 1 2 3 4 1 1.18 1.57 2.80 2.26 2 1.60 1.59 3.44 3.06 3 1.61 1.57 3.48 3.12 As with the previous experiment, interval mapping with isolates 1 and 2 located putative QTL on the proximal end of linkage group 2 and one or two on linkage group 5: another QTL on linkage group 3 was only effective against isolate 2. The lod-likelihood plots on linkage group 5 showed very broad peaks for both isolates but the percentage phenotypic variation accounted for by this QTL was highest at the earlier scoring date and the higher for isolate 1 (17.3%) than for isolate 2 (8.6%). The estimated phenotypic values associated with co-dominant markers suggest that the QTL was recessive against both isolates. The QTL on linkage group 2 associated with an SSR (M4136) accounted for a maximum of 8.5% of the variation. The skewed distribution towards susceptibility against isolates 3 and 4 showed that there were very few effective QTL segregating and despite the presence of statistically significant QTL on linkage group 5, it had only a small effect on the level of resistance. The lod-likelihood plots suggest that there were a number of minor QTL on other linkage groups, but none were significant in the Kruskall-Wallis test. Isolate x temperature interaction Although this was not in the original workplan, the results from the previous tests indicated that it was necessary to determine whether temperature sensitivity could be isolate dependent. Table 3. Mean crown rust scores of an F2 mapping family infected with two isolates and incubated at 10°C and 25°C Assessment 1 2 3 Isolate 1/10°C 0.70 1.36 1.53 Isolate/Temperature Isolate 3/10°C Isolate 1/25°C 1.60 1.34 2.76 1.90 2.93 2.48 Isolate 3/25°C 2.18 2.96 3.37 As with the previous tests, the mean rust scores were lower for isolate 1 than 3 and lower at 10°C than at 25°C (Table 3). There was a large QTL on linkage group 2 with isolate 3 at 10°C, but not at 25°C. Similarly, there were other temperature-sensitive QTL showing the same response on linkage group 3 and, to a lesser extent, on linkage group 1. With isolate 3, a very high lod score was achieved for a QTL on linkage group 5 at 25°C, but it was only just above the threshold value (2.0) at 10°C and only on the first assessment date. As was characteristic with this linkage group, the lod plots showed a broad peak. High lod values on linkage group 5 were also obtained with isolate 1 but they were significant at both temperatures. Screening other mapping families A further three mapping families developed at IGER were screened to identify suitable material for future evaluation, but none showed segregation for resistance. CSG 15 (1/00) 5 Project title Identify markers associated with crown rust resistance in ryegrass DEFRA project code LS3618 Discussion The crown rust resistance genes segregating in the F2 mapping family are of a quantitative nature, some having only a small effect on the expression of resistance, and are therefore probably more sensitive to the effect of temperature and possibly other environmental or physiological variables. The resistance genes were largely ineffective against some isolates and of little use for plant breeding, but could be used to test marker-assisted selection. A QTL on linkage group 5 gave consistently high lod scores in all tests Interestingly, there are also QTL for water soluble carbohydrate on the same linkage group. When the role of temperature was looked at with a more virulent isolate the QTL were more temperature sensitive. The findings that there were isolate specific QTL segregating in this mapping family is the first time this has been reported in perennial ryegrass. The results from this project supports the work on producing improved varieties of perennial ryegrass by providing knowledge on the inheritance of resistance to crown rust and how it might be exploited in the future. This will assist in maintaining an output of new ryegrass varieties which in itself help to maintain the sustainability of UK livestock production. Future plans Although it is possible that mapping families developed to look at the genetics of traits other than disease resistance might be suitable to identify resistance genes, to make further progress it will be necessary to develop mapping families specifically for crown rust using the cultivars and lines from wild populations. Lines have been developed from wild populations with effective sources of resistance. Similarly, there have been further advances in the development of marker technology which make it more efficient to develop mapping families. Rather than use marker-assisted selection as part of a breeding programme it is envisaged that genes will be identified and markers used to introgress resistance into suitable parents including ones that may already be carrying effective genes. Such an approach increases the number of barriers which the pathogen has to overcome and is likely to provide durability of resistance. Objective 2 - Identify molecular markers associated with crown rust resistance introgressed into Italian ryegrass from meadow fescue. Introduction Many grasses are hosts of the crown rust fungus including agriculturally important species such as meadow fescue (Festuca pratensis), and other Festuca spp. The fungus exists in different physiological forms and this manifests itself both at the formae speciales level - its capacity to infect certain grass species - and as physiological races - specificity to certain genotypes within the species. However, the relationship between different hosts and physiological forms of the fungus is complex. Therefore, within any host species some susceptibility to P. coronata from an unrelated species can occur especially under artificial conditions in a glasshouse or growth cabinet. Consequently, within a population of F. pratensis, individual plants can differ in their reaction to infection by P. coronata originating from Lolium spp., with some populations having a relatively high proportion of susceptible plants, while others are very resistant. Thus, F. pratensis could be a potential source of durable resistance. In addition, there is some evidence that resistance derived from Festuca spp. is more stable at high temperature and therefore more effective in warmer regions. Meadow fescue and the two cultivated ryegrass species, Italian ryegrass (L. multiflorum) and perennial ryegrass (L. perenne), are closely related with a degree of homology in their chromosomes. On the other hand, the relationship is sufficiently distant that L. multiflorum (Lm) and F. pratensis (Fp) chromosomes can be distinguished in hybrid plants using genomic in situ hybridisation (GISH), sometimes called chromosome painting. The potential of Lolium/Festuca introgression mapping to develop physical and genetic maps, to determine the genetic control of important characters and to develop new germplasm for plant breeders has been explored for some time and it should be possible to use it to identify the region of the Fp chromosome carrying genes for disease resistance. Methods & Results Plant and rust material CSG 15 (1/00) 6 Project title Identify markers associated with crown rust resistance in ryegrass DEFRA project code LS3618 Two BC3 families (P193/88 and P193/104) from a cross between L. multiflorum4 x F. pratensis along with the parent plants, developed in a previous DEFRA project (LS1405) were selected as potential plant material to identify molecular markers associated with crown rust resistance derived from the meadow fescue parent. These were tested using standard methods and the same crown rust population that was used to screen each generation during the development of the BC line. Screening plants material The two BC3 generation lines gave very clear-cut segregation of R:S plants, with almost all of the resistant plants showing immunity. Both lines were derived from the same F. pratensis parent and F1. But, as with the BC2 generation, one line had significantly more susceptible plants than the expected 1:1 ratio. A sample of mitotically dividing cells from crown rust resistant and susceptible plants in the two families was examined using GISH to identify the introgressed fescue chromosome segment. All resistant plants carried a fescue segment on a single chromosome, which in one of the lines (P193/88) was confined to the short arm of the chromosome. None of the susceptible plants of P193/104 contained a visible introgression whereas those of P193/88 either contained no segment or one which appeared to be physically smaller than those in resistant plants. Using GISH, the resistance locus could be physically mapped to the mid-point of a short arm. The P193/104 family was therefore unsuitable for mapping the introgression as there was no recombination within the fescue segment. Some additional work was carried out to investigate why this had occurred. Inflorescences from the BC2 parents were harvested and chromosome pairing at the metaphase 1 stage of meiosis examined in pollen mother cells. In the BC parent of the P193/104 family there were fewer bivalents (ratio of 4.08 bivalents: 2.92 univalents) than in the parent of P193/88 (5.72 bivalents: 1.28 univalents). Further analysis using a chromosome painting technique to trace the fate of the fescue segment during meiosis would be necessary to confirm the significance of this. Segregation ratios of the progeny of BC3 plants, when crossed as R x S and R x R, were in agreement with the hypothesis that the resistance was controlled by a single gene or very closely linked genes (Table 4). No resistant plants were produced by crossing S x S plants, confirming that the resistance is carried on the introgressed segment. Table 4. Segregation ratios in progenies of pair crosses between crown rust resistant and susceptible BC3 plants of crosses between Festuca pratensis and Lolium multiflorum4 Cross Resistant Rust reaction Intermediate† Expected ratio Χ2 values Susceptible SxS Cross A Cross B 0 0 0 0 59 66 - - RxR Cross C Cross D 44 50 0 3 15 21 3:1 0.005 NS 0.45 NS RxS Cross E Cross F 72 62 0 0 57 51 1:1 1.74 NS 1.07 NS † intermediate types were grouped with resistant class for analysis NS = no significant difference AFLP analysis DNA was extracted from all the parent and 79 BC3 plants, followed by standard procedures for PCR reactions. EcoR1 and Mse1 primer combinations were used. AFLP analysis was carried out using an ABI gene scanner. Initially, only parental DNA was analysed and AFLP markers present on the F. pratensis and BC parents but absent in the Lolium parents were identified. Because the mapping line was multi-parental, fescue-specific markers were rare events. Those primer pair combinations giving fescue specific markers CSG 15 (1/00) 7 Project title Identify markers associated with crown rust resistance in ryegrass DEFRA project code LS3618 were repeated for the entire BC3 population and plants were scored for the presence or absence of the marker. The data output was viewed using ABI Genotyper™ software package. Genetic map A genetic map was developed from the linkage relationships between AFLP markers and crown rust resistance using JoinMap 2.0 software (Fig.1). There was no recombination between some markers and crown rust resistance suggesting that theoretically these markers were very close to or part of the resistance gene. In addition, Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphisms (RFLP), simple sequence repeats (SSR), and single tagged sequence (STS) markers were identified which segregated with the crown rust resistance. There is a strong linkage between the markers CDO127 and e51174a and weak linkage with CDO412a. This shows that the introgression is located on Lolium chromosome 5. The three STS markers (rust665393f/4r, APO077529.5/6 and APO066757.4/5) are based on sequences that come from one end of the rice chromosome 12 and therefore show a syntenic relationship. On another Lolium perenne map there is approximately 10 cM distance between two of the STS markers (I. Armstead, pers. comm.). This, along with the AFLP data, suggests that there is a degree of suppressed recombination in the introgressed region where the crown rust resistance is located. Fig. 1 Linkage map of the chromosome (left) carrying crown rust resistance in Lolium multiflorum (Bc3 line P193/88) in comparison with the linkage map (right) for chromosome 5 in the F2 Lolium perenne mapping family. 0 1 2 CR5 5 6 8 9 10 11 E35M5101 E35M5102 E35M6101 AP066757 E35M5901 E41M5401 CR E37M6101 E38M4901 E41M4901 E41M4902 E35M5201 E37M4701 17 E51174S 24 CDO127 4 50 CDO412 LP F2 C5 0 AP077529 E37M6001 E38M5901 rust66539 7 10 11 13 16 APO77529 20 21 22 24 25 28 30 32 37 39 43 47 H11G05 APO66757 rv0757 GSY60.2 E51174S rv0814 CDO127 CDO1380.2 F29-1 rv0184 RZ206 BCD1087 rv0495 PSR574 rv0950 rv1258 CDO412 rv0340 B6103 rv1112 E40M5907 66 69 E36M5512 E40M5905 74 R2710 83 RZ404 17 Although the map indicates some recombination between those markers close to the crown rust gene, the actual data does not show this in all cases, which is a reflection of the sample size. Discussion The objective of this part of the project was to identify AFLP markers which were common to the introgressed segment and provide supporting evidence, alongside the cytological assessment, that the crown rust resistance was derived from the fescue parent. The results obtained support this hypothesis and the project has been successful as a proof of principle for this procedure. Markers associated with the fescue parent and closely linked to the crown rust resistance have been identified and some additional work has identified the Lolium linkage group carrying the introgression. However, there is evidence of suppressed CSG 15 (1/00) 8 Project title Identify markers associated with crown rust resistance in ryegrass DEFRA project code LS3618 recombination in the introgressed region. If this is correct then it will be difficult to recombine the resistance into a ryegrass background without also carrying many other fescue derived genes, some of which might be deleterious. Although the two individual objectives of this project were independent of each other, it is interesting that crown rust resistance genes identified in both ryegrass and fescue have been located on linkage group 5. This work has demonstrated that a novel form of disease resistance can be utilised in breeding programmes using a conventional breeding technique in association with molecular markers. It gives plant breeders the choice in the future to exploit this type resistance should sources present in perennial ryegrass become less effective and new types difficult to find. Thus future improvements in quality characteristics of new varieties will be protected and assist in maintaining the sustainability of UK livestock production. Future plans This project was initiated to prove the hypothesis that fescue-derived crown rust resistance could be transferred into a ryegrass background. Another generation of backcrossing will be necessary to see whether the fescue segment can be reduced in size without losing the crown rust resistance. To exploit this resistance it will also be necessary to follow a precautionary principle and test it with a range of crown rust cultures to demonstrate that it is an effective source. Some of the flanking AFLP markers could be used to incorporate the resistance into perennial ryegrass breeding lines, but there is evidence that these unmodified markers are not fescue specific, being only specific to the parental material, so that only potential ryegrass parents without the marker(s) can be used. The development of fescue specific markers at IGER could be exploited in the future to develop this further. Publications Refereed Journals 1. Thorogood, D., Paget, M., Humphreys, M., Turner, L., Armstead, I. & Roderick, H. (2001) QTL analysis of crown rust resistance in perennial ryegrass - implications for breeding. International Turfgrass Society Research Journal 9, 218-223. 2. Roderick, H.W., Morgan, W.G., Harper, J. A. & Thomas, H.M. Introgression of crown rust (Puccinia coronata) resistance from meadow fescue (Festuca pratensis) into Italian ryegrass (Lolium multiflorum) and physical mapping of the locus. Heredity (accepted Feb 2003). Proceedings of conferences 1. Thorogood, D., Paget, M., Humphreys, M., Turner, L. & Roderick, H. (1999) A QTL analysis of crown rust resistance in perennial ryegrass. In: New Approaches and Techniques in Breeding Sustainable Fodder Crops and Amenity Grasses. Proceedings of the 22nd Eucarpia Conference, Fodder crops and amenity grass section meeting, St Petersburg, Russia, pp 200-207 2. Humphreys, M., Abberton, M., Cook, R., Turner, L., Roderick, H., & Thorogood, D. (2001) Molecular breeding in pasture species and its application to improving pest and disease resistance. Proceedings of the 3rd International conference on harmful and beneficial microorganisms in grassland, pastures and turf. Soest (Germany) 26 September 2000, Eds V.H. Paul and P.D. Dapprich, pp 77-87. 3. Roderick, H.W., Humphreys, M.O., Turner, L., Armstead, I. & Thorogood, D. (2002) Isolate specific quantitative trait loci for resistance to crown rust in perennial ryegrass. Grass for Food & Grass for Leisure. Proceedings of the 24th Eucarpia Conference, Fodder crops and amenity grass section meeting, FAL Braunschweig, Germany 22-26 September 2002. CSG 15 (1/00) 9 CSG 15 (Rev. 6/02) 10