Development and characterization of Brassica juncea fruticulosa introgression lines exhibiting resistance to mustard aphid
Chhaya Atri, Bharti Kumar, Hitesh Kumar, Sanjula Sharma, Surinder, S. Banga

TL;DR
This study developed and characterized Brassica juncea lines with resistance to mustard aphid by introgressing resistance genes from Brassica fruticulosa, demonstrating cytogenetic stability and potential for marker-assisted breeding.
Contribution
First successful transfer of aphid resistance from B. fruticulosa to B. juncea using an amphiploid bridge and molecular markers, with detailed cytogenetic and resistance characterization.
Findings
Most lines had stable euploid chromosome numbers
Introgression lines showed varying resistance to aphids
Some lines exhibited consistent resistance over seasons
Abstract
Background: Mustard aphid is a major pest of Brassica oilseeds. No source for aphid resistance is presently available in Brassica juncea . A wild crucifer, Brassica fruticulosa is known to be resistant to mustard aphid. An artificially synthesized amphiploid, AD-4 (B. fruticulosa x B. rapa var. brown sarson) was developed for use as a bridge species to transfer fruticulosa resistance to B. juncea. Using the selfed backcross we could select a large number of lines with resistance to mustard aphid. This paper reports cytogenetic stability of introgression lines, molecular evidence for alien introgression and their reaction to mustard aphid infestation. Results: Majority of introgression lines had expected euploid chromosome number(2n= 36), showed normal meiosis and high pollen grain fertility. Well-distributed and transferable simple-sequence repeats (SSR) markers for all the 18 B. juncea…
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