Tuesday, 8 November 2005
4

An Unexpected Collateral Finding from Seed Proteomics: Does the á-Amylase Insect Inhibitor from Seeds of Hordeum vulgare Subsp Spontaneum Confer a Resistance to Cereal Leaf Beetle (Oulema melanopus)?.

Dominique Roche, Utah State University, Utah State University, UMC 4820, Logan, UT 84322

Qingzhen Jiang 1, Justin Clawson 1, David Hole 1, Pat Hayes 2, Ann Corey 2 and Dominique Roche 1.

1- Department of plants, soils and biometeorology, Utah State University, Logan, UT 84321, USA 2- Dept. of Crop and Soil Science, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon, OR 97331, USA

Protein polymorphism was investigated in water-soluble seed extracts between Hordeum vulgare subsp vulgare (Harrington cv.) and Hordeum vulgare subsp spontaneum. Analysis of polymorphic spots by tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) led to the identification of gene products of CMa, a component of a tetrameric inhibitor to an insect á-amylase. In H. v. vulgare barley, the CMa gene is located on chromosome 1(7H) bin 4 (SSR HvCMA). Preliminary mapping on a partial set of recombinant chromosomal substitution lines (27 RCSLs) confirmed a position in a H. v. spontaneum genomic region homologous to HvCMA. We will present the experimental design to test some RCSLs polymorphic for this protein in presence of a heavy infestation of cereal leaf beetles (Oulema melanopus). This example seems to confirm that the proteomic approach may yield some wild/donor alleles from H. v. subsp. spontaneum for barley improvement.


Back to Disease Resistance/Transformation &Transgenes
Back to C07 Genomics, Molecular Genetics & Biotechnology

Back to The ASA-CSSA-SSSA International Annual Meetings (November 6-10, 2005)