Tokio Imbe
International Rice Research Institute
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Featured researches published by Tokio Imbe.
Archive | 2000
Tokio Imbe; H. Tsunematsu; Hiroshi Kato; Gurdev S. Khush
To develop rice cultivars with durable resistance to blast, the following breeding strategies have been proposed: accumulation of minor genes (field, partial or quantitative resistance), pyramiding of major genes (true, complete or qualitative resistance), and a combination of major and minor genes, multilines of major genes, etc. Knowledge of the genetic constitutions of major genes in rice cultivars and the pathogenicity of blast isolates are prerequisite for all of these strategies.
Rice | 2013
Ritsuko Mizobuchi; Hiroyuki Sato; Shuichi Fukuoka; Takanari Tanabata; Seiya Tsushima; Tokio Imbe; Masahiro Yano
BackgroundBacterial grain rot (BGR), caused by the bacterial pathogen Burkholderia glumae, is a destructive disease of rice. Because BGR tends to be highly affected by environmental conditions such as temperature and humidity, it is difficult to evaluate BGR resistance of diverse cultivars with different heading dates by using field inoculation. Molecular tagging of genes involved in BGR is an important objective for rice breeding.ResultsIn this study, we mapped a quantitative trait locus (QTL) for BGR resistance by a modified cut-panicle inoculation method. First, we assessed the levels of BGR resistance in 84 cultivars by a standard cut-panicle inoculation technique, in which panicles are harvested and inoculated in the laboratory under controlled conditions. For the genetic analysis, we selected two cultivars: Kele, a resistant traditional lowland cultivar (indica) that originated in India, and Hitomebore, a susceptible modern lowland cultivar (temperate japonica) from Japan. Second, by comparing the susceptibility of Kele and Hitomebore spikelets before and up to 3 days after anthesis, we found a dramatic decline in susceptibility at 1 day after anthesis in Kele but not in Hitomebore. Thus, we applied a modified method by inoculating spikelets at 1 day after anthesis for further analysis. To search for QTLs associated with BGR resistance, we measured the ratio of diseased spikelets (RDS, an index reflecting both quantity and severity of infection) and the ratio of diseased spikelet area (RDSA) in 110 backcrossed inbred lines (BILs) derived from a cross between Kele and Hitomebore. One major QTL associated with both RDS and RDSA was detected on the long arm of chromosome 1. This QTL explained 25.7% and 12.1% of the total phenotypic variance in RDS and RDSA in the BILs, respectively, and the Kele allele increased BGR resistance.ConclusionsWe mapped a major QTL for BGR resistance on the long arm of chromosome 1. These results clearly demonstrated that genetic analysis of BGR resistance in rice can be effectively performed and that this trait could be a target of marker-assisted selection in rice breeding programs.
Molecular Breeding | 2011
Mary Jeanie Telebanco-Yanoria; Yohei Koide; Yoshimichi Fukuta; Tokio Imbe; Hiroshi Tsunematsu; Hiroshi Kato; Leodegario A. Ebron; Thi Minh Nguyet Nguyen; Nobuya Kobayashi
Twenty-seven near-isogenic lines (NILs) with the genetic background of a blast-susceptible variety, CO 39, were developed by repeated backcrossing as a first set of a large number of differential varieties (DVs) with Indica-type genetic background. The NILs included 14 resistance genes—Pish, Pib, Piz-5, Piz-t, Pi5(t), Pik-s, Pik, Pik-h, Pik-m, Pik-p, Pi1, Pi7(t), Pita, and Pita-2—derived from 26 donor varieties. The reaction patterns of NILs against 20 standard isolates from the Philippines were similar to those of blast monogenic lines with the same resistance gene, except for those against two isolates that are avirulent to Pia in the genetic background of CO 39. A genome-wide DNA marker survey revealed that chromosome segments were introgressed in the regions where each resistance gene was previously mapped and most of the other chromosome regions in each NIL were CO 39 type. Segregation analysis of resistance and co-segregation analysis between resistance and DNA markers using F3 populations derived from the crosses between each NIL and the recurrent parent, CO 39, revealed a single-gene control of resistance and association between resistance and target introgressed segments. The morphological characters of each NIL were almost the same as those of the recurrent parent except for some lines, suggesting that these NILs can be used even under tropical conditions where Japonica-type DVs are not suitable for cropping. Thus, these NILs are useful not only as genetic tools for blast resistance study but also as sources of genes for breeding of Indica-type rice varieties.
Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2013
R. Mizobuchi; Hiroyuki Sato; Shuichi Fukuoka; S. Tsushima; Tokio Imbe; Masahiro Yano
Bacterial seedling rot (BSR), a destructive disease of rice (Oryza sativa L.), is caused by the bacterial pathogen Burkholderia glumae. To identify QTLs for resistance to BSR, we conducted a QTL analysis using chromosome segment substitution lines (CSSLs) derived from a cross between Nona Bokra (resistant) and Koshihikari (susceptible). Comparison of the levels of BSR in the CSSLs and their recurrent parent, Koshihikari, revealed that a region on chromosome 10 was associated with resistance. Further genetic analyses using an F5 population derived from a cross between a resistant CSSL and Koshihikari confirmed that a QTL for BSR resistance was located on the short arm of chromosome 10. The Nona Bokra allele was associated with resistance to BSR. Substitution mapping in the Koshihikari genetic background demonstrated that the QTL, here designated as qRBS1 (quantitative trait locus for RESISTANCE TO BACTERIAL SEEDLING ROT 1), was located in a 393-kb interval (based on the Nipponbare reference genome sequence) defined by simple sequence repeat markers RM24930 and RM24944.
Breeding Science | 2000
Hiroshi Tsunematsu; Mary Jeanie T. Yanoria; Leodegario A. Ebron; Nagao Hayashi; Ikuo Ando; Hiroshi Kato; Tokio Imbe; Gurdev S. Khush
Breeding Science | 2004
Hiroyuki Sato; Osamu Ideta; Ikuo Ando; Yasufumi Kunihiro; Hideyuki Hirabayashi; Masataka Iwano; Atsushi Miyasaka; Hiroshi Nemoto; Tokio Imbe
Breeding Science | 1985
Tokio Imbe; Shohei Matsumoto
Breeding Science | 2007
Yoshinobu Takeuchi; Yasunori Nonoue; Takeshi Ebitani; Keitaro Suzuki; Noriaki Aoki; Hiroyuki Sato; Osamu Ideta; Hideyuki Hirabayashi; Masakata Hirayama; Hisatoshi Ohta; Hiroshi Nemoto; Hiroshi Kato; Ikuo Ando; Ken’ichi Ohtsubo; Masahiro Yano; Tokio Imbe
Breeding Science | 2006
Yoshinobu Takeuchi; Takeshi Ebitani; Toshio Yamamoto; Hiroyuki Sato; Hisatoshi Ohta; Hideyuki Hirabayashi; Hiroshi Kato; Ikuo Ando; Hiroshi Nemoto; Tokio Imbe; Masahiro Yano
Breeding Science | 2003
Makoto Sakai; Shuichi Iida; Hideo Maeda; Yoshihiro Sunohara; Hiroshi Nemoto; Tokio Imbe