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Inheritance of resistance to rice tungro spherical virus in rice (Oryza sativa L.) M. Shahjahan, T. Imbe, B.S. Jalani, A.H. Zakri, and O. Othman Abstract Three rice varieties resistant to rice tungro spherical virus (RTSV) and on susceptible variety were used to determine the mode of inheritance of RTSV resistance and the allelic relationships of the genes involved. Varieties Utri Merah, Kataribhog, and Pankhari 203 were found to be completely resistant to RTSV. To assess resistant and susceptible seedlings, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay was employed. F1 populations invariably showed susceptibility to RTSV. The F2 data suggest a single recessive gene for resistance in Utri Merah, whereas resistance in Kataribhog and Pankhari 203 is controlled by three complementary recessive genes. Resistance in Kataribhog and Pankhari 203 appears to be allelic, whereas the single recessive gene of Utri Merah is nonallelic to the genes in Kataribhog and Pankhari 203. Introduction Tungro, known as penyakit merah (red disease) in Malaysia, is one of the most widespread and destructive rice viral diseases in Southeast Asia. The disease is attributed to the rice tungro bacilliform virus (RTBV) and the rice tungro spherical virus (RTSV); RTBV causes the disease and RTSV intensifies it (Hibino et al 1978). The dearth of information on the inheritance of resistance to the disease is probably the main reason for the absence of a modern high-yielding cultivar resistant to it. Identification of resistance sources, detection of genes, and information about the inheritance of resistance are prerequisites to a successful breeding program. The present study was undertaken to collect information on the inheritance of RTSV resistance in rice. Materials and methods Three tungro-resistant varieties—Utri Merah, Kataribhog, and Pankhari 203 (Ling 1979)—were crossed with TN1, a highly susceptible variety, during the 1985 main season at the Malaysian Agricultural Research and Development Institute, Bumbong Lima, Seberang Perai. In addition, crosses were made among the resistant varieties to study their allelic relationships. F2 and F3 seeds were produced in subsequent seasons and used in this study. Green leafhopper (GLH) Nephotettix virescens that had been reared on TN1 for more than 100 generations was used as the vector for the virus. RTSV was inoculated on 10-day-old seedlings of F1 and F2 populations and on the parental materials by caging 2 viruliferous vectors (after an acquisition access period of 24 hours) with individual seedlings in glass chimneys. The same method was followed to inoculate RTSV into F3 families, but instead of 2 viruliferous vectors, 40 were placed with individual families of 20 seedlings in mylar cages. In combinations where Pankhari 203, a GLHresistant variety having the Glh-1 gene, was involved, the Pankhari 203 vector biotype was used to eliminate the vector resistance factor. Three weeks after inoculation, the seedlings were assessed individually for RTSV infection by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). However, the seedlings of each F3 family were pooled to facilitate the detection of homozygous resistant families. For convenience of presentation, the actual values of RTSV concentration from the ELISA reader were divided by the value of controlled samples of each microplate, then multiplied by 100. Antiserum for RTSV was supplied by T. Omura, National Agriculture Research Center, Tsukuba, Japan. Results Kataribhog, Utri Merah, and Pankhari 203 invariably showed complete resistance to RTSV. All seedlings of these varieties showed zero concentration of RTSV compared with 95.3 in TN1 (Table 1). The F1 progenies of all crosses had RTSV infection (Table 2), and the RTSV concentration was nearly as high as that in the susceptible parent (Table 3), suggesting that RTSV resistance in Utri Merah, Kataribhog, and Pankhari 203 is recessive. The F2 populations of the three crosses did not segregate in the same mode. In Utri Merah/TN1, the ratio of resistant to susceptible seedlings fit 1:3 (Table 4), indicating that a single recessive gene is responsible for RTSV resistance in Utri Merah. Data from F3 families of this combination confirmed the F2 findings (Table 5). It was not possible to classify the infected families into segregating and homozygous susceptibles, because seedlings of each family were assessed together, not individually by ELISA, and only homozygous resistant families were detected. The F2 and F3 data fit the 1:3 ratio (p > 0.30 and p > 0.50, respectively, Table 4, 5). The frequency distribution of F2 and F3 seedlings with various levels of RTSV concentration was bimodal, as found in typical Mendelian inheritance (Fig. 1). The F2 and F3 results of Kataribhog/TN1 showed a satisfactory fit to the 1:63 ratio (p > 0.02 and p > 0.70, respectively; Table 4, 5), indicating that three complementary recessive genes control RTSV resistance in Kataribhog. The RTSV concentration in the F2 population also showed a bimodal distribution (Fig. 2). Likewise, the F2 and F3 results of Pankhari 203/TN1 showed a 1:63 ratio (p < 0.01 and p > 0.70, respectively; Tables 4, 5), implying that three complementary recessive genes also control RTSV resistance in Pankhari 203. A mode of RTSV concentration similar to that found in the two other crosses was observed in the F2 population (Fig. 3). The allelic relationships among resistant varieties are illustrated in Table 6 and Figures 4 and 5. The data on F1 and F2 populations of Pankhari 203/Kataribhog reveal that the three complementary recessive genes responsible for RTSV resistance in each of these varieties are allelic. All 30 F1 seedlings tested from this combination showed complete resistance to RTSV; in the F2 population, no segregation was observed, and all 280 seedlings tested showed RTSV resistance (Table 6). In the two other combinations—Utri Merah/Kataribhog and Utri Merah/Pankhari 203—the F1 populations were totally infected with RTSV; in the F2 populations, the data show a close fit to a 1:3 ratio (p > 0.95; Table 6). The segregations observed in the F2 populations reveal no allelic relationship between Utri Merah and Kataribhog (Fig. 4), or between Utri Merah and Pankhari 203 (Fig. 5). Discussion Studies on the genetics of tungro resistance in rice, based on visual assessment of inoculated seedlings (IRRI 1966, Lande 1975, Seetharaman et al 1976, Shastry et al 1972), have shown that resistance is dominant, and that F2 populations inherit in a ratio of 9 resistant: 7 susceptible, which suggests two pairs of genes having cumulative effects. Most of the resistance sources used by the authors mentioned above were also resistant to the vector. RTSV can spread as an independent virus (Aguiero et al 1986). In some cases it is not possible to distinguish visually seedlings infected with both viruses from those infected with only one. Therefore, use of a convenient and efficient serological method for proper assessment of inoculated seedlings is necessary. Although a strong correlation was found between visual assessment and ELISA (Shahjahan 1989), this relationship may not be critical enough for a genetic study. Recent studies by Shahjahan et al (1990) revealed that tolerance for RTBV is a polygenic trait. However, no information is available about the inheritance of resistance to RTSV. In the present study, only Utri Merah, Kataribhog, and Pankhari 203 were identified as completely resistant to RTSV. A single recessive gene was found to be responsible for RTSV resistance in Utri Merah, a traditional rice variety from Indonesia. We identified Utri Merah as an ideal source of RTSV resistance (Shahjahan 1989) and showed that the variety is also able to restrict RTBV multiplication. Kataribhog and Pankhari 203 are also suitable as RTSV resistance sources. It would be advantageous to use Pankhari 203 as a RTSV resistance source because it is also resistant to the vector. In addition, varieties resistant to RTSV may be able to inhibit the transmission of RTBV because the vector is unable to transmit RTBV without acquisition of RTSV. References cited Aguiero V M, N B Bajet, G B Jonson, H Hibino. 1986. Spread of rice tungro spherical virus (RTSV) in Bicol, Philippines. International Rice Research Newsletter 11:17–19. Hibino H, M Roechan, S Sudarisman. 1978. Association of two types of virus particles withpenyakit habang (tungro disease) or rice in Indonesia. Phytopathology 68:1412–1416. IRRI—International Rice Research Institute, 1966. Annual report for 1965. P.O. Box 933, Manila, Philippines. p. 94–104. Lande M. 1975. The inheritance of tungro resistance in rice selection CR94-13 and allelic relationships of genes for tungro resistance in CR94-13 and lR833-6-2-1 lines. MS thesis, University of the Philippines at Los Baños, Laguna, Philippines. 30 p. Ling KC. 1979. Tungro Disease. Pages 102–104, In: Rice virus diseases. International Rice Research Institute, P.O. Box 933, Manila, Philippines. Seetharaman R, K Prasad, A Anjaneyulu. 1976. Inheritance of resistance to rice tungro virus disease. Indian Journal of Genetics and Plant Breeding 36:34–36. Shahjahan M. 1989. Inheritance of resistance to tungro virus in rice (Oryza sativa L.). Ph D dissertation, Department of Genetics, Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia. 92 p. Shahjahan M, BS Jalani, AH Zakri, T Imbe, O Othman. 1990. Inheritance of tolerance to rice tungro bacilliform virus (RTBV) in rice (Oryza sativa L.). Theoretical and Applied Genetics 80:513–517. Shastry SV, VT John, DV Seshu .1972. Breeding for resistance to rice tungro virus in India. Pages 239–252, In: Rice Breeding. International Rice Research Institute, P.O. Box 933, Manila, Philippines. Notes Authors’ addresses: M. Shahjahan, B.S. Jalani, and A.H. Zakri, Department of Genetics, Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia, Bangi, Malaysia; T. Imbe, Tropical Agriculture Research Center, Tsukuba, Japan; O. Othman, Malaysian Agricultural Research and Development Institute (MARDI), Bumbong Lima, Seberang Perai, Malaysia. Acknowledgments: We appreciate the helpful suggestions of H. Habibuddin of MARDI. Citation: Shahjahan M, T Imbe, BS Jalani, AH Zakri, O Othman. 1991. Inheritance of resistance to rice tungro spherical virus in rice (Oryza sativa L.). pp. 247-254. In: Rice Genetics II. Second International Rice Genetics Symposium 14-18 May 1990. International Rice Research Institute, P.O. Box 933, Manila, Philippines. 844 pp.