Blast disease caused by the filamentous fungus Pyricularia oryzae (syn. Magnaporthe oryzae) is one of the most destructive diseases of rice (Oryza sativa L.) around the globe. An aus cultivar, Shoni, showed resistance against at least four Japanese P. oryzae isolates. To understand Shoni's resistance against the P. oryzae isolate Naga69-150, genetic analysis was carried out using recombinant inbred lines developed by a cross between Shoni and the japonica cultivar Hitomebore, which is susceptible to Naga69-150. The result indicated that the resistance was controlled by a single locus, which was named Pi-Shoni. A QTL analysis identified Pi-Shoni as being located in the telomeric region of chromosome 11. A candidate gene approach in the region indicated that Pi-Shoni corresponds to the previously cloned Pik locus, and we named this allele Pikps. Loss of gene function mediated by RNA interference demonstrated that a head-to-head-orientated pair of NBS-LRR receptor genes (Pikps-1 and Pikps-2) are required for the Pikps-mediated resistance. Amino acid sequence comparison showed that Pikps-1 is 99% identical to Pikp-1, while Pikps-2 is identical to Pikp-2. Pikps-1 had one amino acid substitution (Pro351Ser) in the NBS domain as compared to Pikp-1. The recognition specificity of Pikps against known AVR-Pik alleles is identical to that of Pikp.