Peter E. Eckstein
University of Saskatchewan
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Featured researches published by Peter E. Eckstein.
Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2011
C. A. McCartney; Robert Stonehouse; B. G. Rossnagel; Peter E. Eckstein; Graham J. Scoles; T. Zatorski; Aaron D. Beattie; J. Chong
Crown rust is an important disease of oat caused by Puccinia coronata Corda f. sp. avenae Eriks. Crown rust is efficiently and effectively managed through the development of resistant oat varieties. Pc91 is a seedling crown rust resistance gene that is highly effective against the current P. coronata population in North America. The primary objective of this study was to develop DNA markers linked to Pc91 for purposes of marker-assisted selection in oat breeding programs. The Pc91 locus was mapped using a population of F7-derived recombinant inbred lines developed from the cross ‘CDC Sol-Fi’/‘HiFi’ made at the Crop Development Centre, University of Saskatchewan. The population was evaluated for reaction to P. coronata in field nurseries in 2008 and 2009. Pc91 mapped to a linkage group consisting of 44 Diversity Array Technology (DArT) markers. DArTs were successfully converted to sequence characterized amplified region (SCAR) markers. Five robust SCARs were developed from three non-redundant DArTs that co-segregated with Pc91. SCAR markers were developed for different assay systems, such that SCARs are available for agarose gel electrophoresis, capillary electrophoresis, and Taqman single nucleotide polymorphism detection. The SCAR markers accurately postulated the Pc91 status of 23 North American oat breeding lines.
BMC Plant Biology | 2014
Yang Lin; Belaghihalli N. Gnanesh; J. Chong; Gang Chen; Aaron D. Beattie; Jennifer Mitchell Fetch; H. Randy Kutcher; Peter E. Eckstein; J. G. Menzies; Eric W. Jackson; Curt A. McCartney
BackgroundCrown rust, caused by Puccinia coronata f. sp. avenae, is the most important disease of oat worldwide. Adult plant resistance (APR), based upon partial resistance, has proven to be a durable rust management strategy in other cereal rust pathosystems. The crown rust APR in the oat line MN841801 has been effective for more than 30 years. The genetic basis of this APR was studied under field conditions in three recombinant inbred line (RIL) populations: 1) AC Assiniboia/MN841801, 2) AC Medallion/MN841801, and 3) Makuru/MN841801. The populations were evaluated for crown rust resistance with the crown rust isolate CR251 (race BRBB) in multiple environments. The 6 K oat and 90 K wheat Illumina Infinium single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) arrays were used for genotyping the AC Assiniboia/MN841801 population. KASP assays were designed for selected SNPs and genotyped on the other two populations.ResultsThis study reports a high density genetic linkage map constructed with oat and wheat SNP markers in the AC Assiniboia/MN841801 RIL population. Most wheat SNPs were monomorphic in the oat population. However the polymorphic wheat SNPs could be scored accurately and integrated well into the linkage map. A major quantitative trait locus (QTL) on oat chromosome 14D, designated QPc.crc-14D, explained up to 76% of the APR phenotypic variance. This QTL is flanked by two SNP markers, GMI_GBS_90753 and GMI_ES14_c1439_83. QPc.crc-14D was validated in the populations AC Medallion/MN841801 and Makuru/MN841801.ConclusionsWe report the first APR QTL in oat with a large and consistent effect. QPc.crc-14D was statistically significant in all environments tested in each of the three oat populations. QPc.crc-14D is a suitable candidate for use in marker-assisted breeding and also an excellent target for map-based cloning. This is also the first study to use the 90 K wheat Infinium SNP array on oat for marker development and comparative mapping. The Infinium SNP array is a useful tool for saturating oat maps with markers. Synteny with wheat suggests that QPc.crc-14D is orthologous with the stripe rust APR gene Yr16 in wheat.
Canadian Journal of Plant Pathology-revue Canadienne De Phytopathologie | 2002
Peter E. Eckstein; N. Krasichynska; D. Voth; S. Duncan; B. G. Rossnagel; Graham J. Scoles
Breeding for true loose smut (Ustilago nuda (Jens.) Rostr.) resistance in barley is expensive because of the great requirements for time, labour, and growth space, and thus is an ideal candidate for screening by indirect methods. One gene (Un8) confers resistance to most known races of the true loose smut pathogen and is the gene present in the majority of western Canadian barley cultivars. Here we report on linkage between this gene and a restriction fragment length polymorphism marker, or various forms of the marker, in a number of segregating barley populations. The different forms of the marker were developed through sequencing and postamplification restriction. The resulting allele-specific amplicon markers can be used in a relatively simple assay, based on the polymerase chain reaction, specific for either the resistant or susceptible allele. The marker was linked to the resistance gene in five crosses involving two sources of resistance and was located on chromosome 5 (1HL). The allele-specific amplicons are being routinely used for marker-assisted selection in conjunction with a rapid DNA template preparation method.
Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2015
Wen Zang; Peter E. Eckstein; Mark Colin; Doug Voth; Axel Himmelbach; Sebastian Beier; Nils Stein; Graham J. Scoles; Aaron D. Beattie
Key messageThe candidate gene for the barleyUn8true loose smut resistance gene encodes a deduced protein containing two tandem protein kinase domains.AbstractIn North America, durable resistance against all known isolates of barley true loose smut, caused by the basidiomycete pathogen Ustilago nuda (Jens.) Rostr. (U. nuda), is under the control of the Un8 resistance gene. Previous genetic studies mapped Un8 to the long arm of chromosome 5 (1HL). Here, a population of 4625 lines segregating for Un8 was used to delimit the Un8 gene to a 0.108 cM interval on chromosome arm 1HL, and assign it to fingerprinted contig 546 of the barley physical map. The minimal tilling path was identified for the Un8 locus using two flanking markers and consisted of two overlapping bacterial artificial chromosomes. One gene located close to a marker co-segregating with Un8 showed high sequence identity to a disease resistance gene containing two kinase domains. Sequence of the candidate gene from the parents of the segregating population, and in an additional 19 barley lines representing a broader spectrum of diversity, showed there was no intron in alleles present in either resistant or susceptible lines, and fifteen amino acid variations unique to the deduced protein sequence in resistant lines differentiated it from the deduced protein sequences in susceptible lines. Some of these variations were present within putative functional domains which may cause a loss of function in the deduced protein sequences within susceptible lines.
BMC Genomics | 2009
Nicholas A. Tinker; Andrzej Kilian; Charlene P. Wight; Katarzyna Heller-Uszynska; Peter Wenzl; H. W. Rines; Åsmund Bjørnstad; Catherine J. Howarth; Jean-Luc Jannink; Joseph M. Anderson; B. G. Rossnagel; D. D. Stuthman; Mark E. Sorrells; Eric W. Jackson; Stine Tuvesson; Frederic L. Kolb; Olof Olsson; Luiz Carlos Federizzi; Marty L. Carson; H. W. Ohm; Stephen J. Molnar; Graham J. Scoles; Peter E. Eckstein; J. Michael Bonman; Alf Ceplitis; Tim Langdon
Journal of Cereal Science | 2002
Chengdao Li; Peter Langridge; Xiao-Qi Zhang; Peter E. Eckstein; B. G. Rossnagel; R.C.M. Lance; E.B. Lefol; M.-Y. Lu; B.L. Harvey; Graham J. Scoles
Genome | 2012
Pirjo Tanhuanpää; Outi Manninen; Aaron D. Beattie; Peter E. Eckstein; Graham J. Scoles; B. G. Rossnagel; Elina Kiviharju
Molecular Breeding | 2007
Vicky Roslinsky; Peter E. Eckstein; Victor Raboy; B. G. Rossnagel; Graham J. Scoles
Molecular Breeding | 2013
Belaghihalli N. Gnanesh; J. Mitchell Fetch; J. G. Menzies; Aaron D. Beattie; Peter E. Eckstein; Curt A. McCartney
Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2015
Belaghihalli N. Gnanesh; Curt A. McCartney; Peter E. Eckstein; Jennifer Mitchell Fetch; J. G. Menzies; Aaron D. Beattie