Fusarium Head Blight in Durum Wheat: Recent Status, Breeding Directions, and Future Research Prospects.
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Fusarium head blight (FHB) is a major fungal disease affecting wheat production worldwide. Since the early 1990s, FHB, caused primarily by Fusarium graminearum, has become one of the most significant diseases faced by wheat producers in Canada and the United States. The increasing FHB problem is likely due to the increased adoption of conservation tillage practices, expansion of maize production, use of susceptible wheat varieties in rotation and climate variability. Durum wheat (Triticum turgidum L. ssp. durum) is notorious for its extreme susceptibility to FHB and breeding for resistance is complicated because sources of FHB resistance are rare in the primary gene pool of tetraploid wheat. Losses due to this disease include yield, test weight, seed quality, food and feed quality and when severe, market access. More importantly, it is the contamination with mycotoxins, such as deoxynivalenol (DON), in Fusarium infected durum kernels that causes the most serious economic as well as food and feed safety concerns. Several studies and thorough reviews have been published on germplasm development and breeding for FHB resistance and the genetics and genomics of FHB resistance in bread or common wheat (T. aestivum L.); however, similar reviews have not been conducted in durum wheat. Thus, the aim of this review is to summarization of and discuss the recent research efforts to mitigate FHB in durum wheat, including QTL mapping, genome-wide association studies, genomic prediction, mutagenesis and characterization of genes and pathways involved in FHB resistance. It also highlights future directions, FHB resistant germplasm, and the potential role of morphological traits to enhance FHB resistance in durum wheat.