Karnal bunt: a re-emerging old foe of wheat

Wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) crop health assumes unprecedented significance in being the second most important staple crop of the world. It is host to an array of fungal pathogens attacking the plant at different developmental stages and accrues various degrees of yield losses owing to these. Tilletia indica that causes Karnal bunt (KB) disease in wheat is one such fungal pathogen of high quarantine importance restricting the free global trade of wheat besides the loss of grain yield as well as quality. With global climate change, the disease appears to be shifting from its traditional areas of occurrence with reports of increased vulnerabilities of new areas across the continents. This KB vulnerability of new geographies is of serious concern because once established, the disease is extremely difficult to eradicate and no known instance of its complete eradication using any management strategy has been reported yet. The host resistance to KB is the most successful as well as preferred strategy for its mitigation and control. However, breeding of KB resistant wheat cultivars has proven to be not so easy, and the low success rate owes to the scarcity of resistance sources, extremely laborious and regulated field screening protocols delaying identification/validation of putative resistance sources, and complex quantitative nature of resistance with multiple genes conferring only partial resistance. Moreover, given a lack of comprehensive understanding of the KB disease epidemiology, host-pathogen interaction, and pathogen evolution. Here, in this review, we attempt to summarize the progress made and efforts underway toward a holistic understanding of the disease itself with a specific focus on the host-pathogen interaction between T. indica and wheat as key elements in the development of resistant germplasm. In this context, we emphasize the tools and techniques being utilized in development of KB resistant germplasm by illuminating upon the genetics concerning the host responses to the KB pathogen including a future course. As such, this article could act as a one stop information primer on this economically important and re-emerging old foe threatening to cause devastating impacts on food security and well-being of communities that rely on wheat.

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Main Authors: Bishnoi, S.K., Xinyao He, Phuke, R.M., Kashyap, P.L., Alakonya, A., Chhokar, V., Singh, R.P., Singh, P.K.
Format: Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Frontiers 2020
Subjects:AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY, Host Resistance, Cultivar Development, KARNAL BUNT, TILLETIA INDICA, DISEASE RESISTANCE, EPIDEMIOLOGY, CLIMATE CHANGE, WHEAT,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10883/21033
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spelling dig-cimmyt-10883-210332022-10-31T20:09:14Z Karnal bunt: a re-emerging old foe of wheat Bishnoi, S.K. Xinyao He Phuke, R.M. Kashyap, P.L. Alakonya, A. Chhokar, V. Singh, R.P. Singh, P.K. AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY Host Resistance Cultivar Development KARNAL BUNT TILLETIA INDICA DISEASE RESISTANCE EPIDEMIOLOGY CLIMATE CHANGE WHEAT Wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) crop health assumes unprecedented significance in being the second most important staple crop of the world. It is host to an array of fungal pathogens attacking the plant at different developmental stages and accrues various degrees of yield losses owing to these. Tilletia indica that causes Karnal bunt (KB) disease in wheat is one such fungal pathogen of high quarantine importance restricting the free global trade of wheat besides the loss of grain yield as well as quality. With global climate change, the disease appears to be shifting from its traditional areas of occurrence with reports of increased vulnerabilities of new areas across the continents. This KB vulnerability of new geographies is of serious concern because once established, the disease is extremely difficult to eradicate and no known instance of its complete eradication using any management strategy has been reported yet. The host resistance to KB is the most successful as well as preferred strategy for its mitigation and control. However, breeding of KB resistant wheat cultivars has proven to be not so easy, and the low success rate owes to the scarcity of resistance sources, extremely laborious and regulated field screening protocols delaying identification/validation of putative resistance sources, and complex quantitative nature of resistance with multiple genes conferring only partial resistance. Moreover, given a lack of comprehensive understanding of the KB disease epidemiology, host-pathogen interaction, and pathogen evolution. Here, in this review, we attempt to summarize the progress made and efforts underway toward a holistic understanding of the disease itself with a specific focus on the host-pathogen interaction between T. indica and wheat as key elements in the development of resistant germplasm. In this context, we emphasize the tools and techniques being utilized in development of KB resistant germplasm by illuminating upon the genetics concerning the host responses to the KB pathogen including a future course. As such, this article could act as a one stop information primer on this economically important and re-emerging old foe threatening to cause devastating impacts on food security and well-being of communities that rely on wheat. 2020-11-28T01:20:17Z 2020-11-28T01:20:17Z 2020 Article Published Version https://hdl.handle.net/10883/21033 10.3389/fpls.2020.569057 English CIMMYT manages Intellectual Assets as International Public Goods. The user is free to download, print, store and share this work. In case you want to translate or create any other derivative work and share or distribute such translation/derivative work, please contact CIMMYT-Knowledge-Center@cgiar.org indicating the work you want to use and the kind of use you intend; CIMMYT will contact you with the suitable license for that purpose Open Access Switzerland Frontiers 11 1664-462X Frontiers in Plant Science 569057
institution CIMMYT
collection DSpace
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cimmyt
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname CIMMYT Library
language English
topic AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Host Resistance
Cultivar Development
KARNAL BUNT
TILLETIA INDICA
DISEASE RESISTANCE
EPIDEMIOLOGY
CLIMATE CHANGE
WHEAT
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Host Resistance
Cultivar Development
KARNAL BUNT
TILLETIA INDICA
DISEASE RESISTANCE
EPIDEMIOLOGY
CLIMATE CHANGE
WHEAT
spellingShingle AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Host Resistance
Cultivar Development
KARNAL BUNT
TILLETIA INDICA
DISEASE RESISTANCE
EPIDEMIOLOGY
CLIMATE CHANGE
WHEAT
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Host Resistance
Cultivar Development
KARNAL BUNT
TILLETIA INDICA
DISEASE RESISTANCE
EPIDEMIOLOGY
CLIMATE CHANGE
WHEAT
Bishnoi, S.K.
Xinyao He
Phuke, R.M.
Kashyap, P.L.
Alakonya, A.
Chhokar, V.
Singh, R.P.
Singh, P.K.
Karnal bunt: a re-emerging old foe of wheat
description Wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) crop health assumes unprecedented significance in being the second most important staple crop of the world. It is host to an array of fungal pathogens attacking the plant at different developmental stages and accrues various degrees of yield losses owing to these. Tilletia indica that causes Karnal bunt (KB) disease in wheat is one such fungal pathogen of high quarantine importance restricting the free global trade of wheat besides the loss of grain yield as well as quality. With global climate change, the disease appears to be shifting from its traditional areas of occurrence with reports of increased vulnerabilities of new areas across the continents. This KB vulnerability of new geographies is of serious concern because once established, the disease is extremely difficult to eradicate and no known instance of its complete eradication using any management strategy has been reported yet. The host resistance to KB is the most successful as well as preferred strategy for its mitigation and control. However, breeding of KB resistant wheat cultivars has proven to be not so easy, and the low success rate owes to the scarcity of resistance sources, extremely laborious and regulated field screening protocols delaying identification/validation of putative resistance sources, and complex quantitative nature of resistance with multiple genes conferring only partial resistance. Moreover, given a lack of comprehensive understanding of the KB disease epidemiology, host-pathogen interaction, and pathogen evolution. Here, in this review, we attempt to summarize the progress made and efforts underway toward a holistic understanding of the disease itself with a specific focus on the host-pathogen interaction between T. indica and wheat as key elements in the development of resistant germplasm. In this context, we emphasize the tools and techniques being utilized in development of KB resistant germplasm by illuminating upon the genetics concerning the host responses to the KB pathogen including a future course. As such, this article could act as a one stop information primer on this economically important and re-emerging old foe threatening to cause devastating impacts on food security and well-being of communities that rely on wheat.
format Article
topic_facet AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Host Resistance
Cultivar Development
KARNAL BUNT
TILLETIA INDICA
DISEASE RESISTANCE
EPIDEMIOLOGY
CLIMATE CHANGE
WHEAT
author Bishnoi, S.K.
Xinyao He
Phuke, R.M.
Kashyap, P.L.
Alakonya, A.
Chhokar, V.
Singh, R.P.
Singh, P.K.
author_facet Bishnoi, S.K.
Xinyao He
Phuke, R.M.
Kashyap, P.L.
Alakonya, A.
Chhokar, V.
Singh, R.P.
Singh, P.K.
author_sort Bishnoi, S.K.
title Karnal bunt: a re-emerging old foe of wheat
title_short Karnal bunt: a re-emerging old foe of wheat
title_full Karnal bunt: a re-emerging old foe of wheat
title_fullStr Karnal bunt: a re-emerging old foe of wheat
title_full_unstemmed Karnal bunt: a re-emerging old foe of wheat
title_sort karnal bunt: a re-emerging old foe of wheat
publisher Frontiers
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10883/21033
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