|
A. Key results from the CIMMYT-Weizmann
-
A
technology, already released to seed companies along with
specially bred IR maize hybrids, inbreds and OPVs, for
seed treating maize with minuscule amounts of herbicide,
providing season long Striga
control.
-
Five
IR maize hybrids nominated to the national performance
trials (NPT), the release procedure in Kenya.
-
Over
188 farmers participated in testing the IR maize
material and assisting us in its evaluation. They
and their neighbors have provided the feedback necessary
for us, the seed companies and herbicide producers, and
the regulators that the products are ready for bulking
up and commercial scale evaluation in areas where Striga
infestation is most severe – areas where the yields
are more than doubled when this technology is used.
-
The
progress and success of this Rockefeller project has
been brought to the attention of the international
scientific community, to the farmer community, and to
the general public by, brochures and other publications,
press releases, presentations at conferences, and
through meetings with chemical companies, seed companies
and regulators.
-
Trained
an MSc. student.
B.
Key results from the University of Sheffield
1. Resistance to Striga
in wild relatives of maize
-
Novel sources of
resistance to Striga hermonthica were observed in
a wild relative of maize, Tripsacum dactyloides. S.
hermonthica development was arrested after
attachment to T. dactyloides. Histological
analysis demonstrated poor haustorial differentiation on
T. dactyloides compared with Z. mays
-
Results suggested
that T. dactyloides produced a signal that
inhibited haustorial development.
-
Partial resistance
to infection was inherited in a Z. mays –T.
dactyloides hybrid.
2. Resistance to Striga in Transposon-tagged
maize
-
Laboratory screens
demonstrated S. hermonthica development was
impaired on one transposon-tagged maize line (3689):
these attached parasites did not emerge above ground.
-
Parasite development
was inhibited post attachment indicating an
incompatibility between host and parasite.
-
No reproduction
(hence seed production) of S. hermonthica was
possible on this line.
C. Key Results from Applied Biotechnology Center (ABC)
- Mexico
1.
Wild relatives
-
Analysis of the
performance of a 38 chromosome hybrid (18 Tripsacum
and 20 maize) and a 28-chromosome hybrid (18 Tripsacum
and 10 maize) showed no dosage dependent relationship
between the performance of a hybrid and the composition
of maize in the genome when plants contained 15 or more Tripsacum
chromosomes.
-
All lines derived
sexually from plants with 24 or less chromosomes
displayed no tolerance to Striga
their growth being significantly lowered under Striga
infestation. Transfer of the Striga
tolerant trait from Tripsacum
to maize may not be achieved by conventional wide cross
techniques.
-
Elucidation being
done on genetic bases of tolerance in Tripsacum,
identification of differences in the transcriptome,
proteome and metabalomes of Tripsacum
and maize under infection by Striga.
-
Libraries (cDNA)
from the roots of uninfected Tripsacum
and maize and two hybrids have been generated and we
plan to generate libraries from Striga-infected
roots in the near future. These libraries will be
used in a modified differential subtraction chain
approach to identify those genes differentially
expressed between the experimental systems.
-
A collaboration with
the Institut de Recherché pour le Development (IRD) in
Montpellier, France allowed the preliminary analysis of
the proteomes of the roots of a 38 chromosome Maize-Tripsacum
hybrid and maize under both Striga-infected
and uninfected conditions. Analysis of 2D gels
indicates that there are differences between the
proteomes of maize and the maize-Tripsacum
hybrid before and after Striga
infection and that there is some differential
response of both maize and the hybrid to Striga
infection.
2.
Transposon-tagged Maize
-
In total, 23 of the
F2 entries were selected after the rounds of screening
as having heritable field level tolerance to Striga.
Some of these lines have been selfed up to F7.
-
Two lines, 252-B and
3689-B performed better under Striga
infestation than uninfected plants. Field
evaluations had deemed line 252-B as tolerant to Striga
(some plants had emerged Striga
but their performance was not noticeably impeded) while
3689-B was resistant (no Striga
emergence). The first observation from the pot
study was that the Striga
plants growing on the 3689-B lines did not emerge from
the growth medium while those on H511 did.
-
The lack of Striga
emergence from the soil coupled with the apparent
tolerance of 3689-B to infection by Striga
make this line a very interesting and important genetic
resource for Striga
control strategies.
-
In 2001, remnant
seed from the 23 selected F2 lines were grown in the
field in Mexico. Each plant was selfed and DNA was
isolated. The resulting F3 seed was sent to Kenya and a
large-scale field screen was conducted in Alupe in the
short rains 2002. The DNA isolated from the F2 entries
was used to construct a linkage map; the map for 3689-B
is complete.
|