Haplotype stacking to improve stability of stripe rust resistance in wheat

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Abstract

This study investigated stripe/yellow rust (YR) responses in the Vavilov wheat diversity panel evaluated across 11 field experiments conducted in Australia and Ethiopia during 2014–2021. Genotype-by-environment interaction (GEI) was analysed using a factor analytic (FA) model. Genotype-level selection was performed with overall performance (OP) and root-mean-square deviation (RMSD), which reflected average performance and stability of YR resistance across environments, respectively. Genomic estimated breeding values (GEBV) for these traits were calculated and compared with those from a multi-trait GBLUP model with average performance represented by the mean GEBV across environments and stability by the standard deviation of GEBV across environments. The FA-based and multi-trait GBLUP GEBV had high correlations. Haplotypes with large effects on OP and RMSD were identified using the local GEBV method. Favourable haplotypes were then used for stacking in breeding simulations, using the Vavilov collection as a base. Compared to truncation selection, optimal haplotype selection (OHS) using an artificial intelligence (AI)-based algorithm achieved longer-term genetic gains for both OP and RMSD (after many generations) by initially selecting founder parents that maximised favourable haplotypes. Simulations using YR responses from diverse environments that mimicked fluctuating environmental conditions across seasons were conducted to evaluate strategies for selection of YR resistance that is stable across years. Strategies which gave most weight to OP, but some weight to RMSD were optimal in these conditions, and substantially reduced variation of performance across years. This study provides useful information for breeding cultivars with both high YR resistance and high stability of resistance across environments.

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