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PI:
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Robin Buruchara
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Contact Details
P.O. Box 6247, Kampala, Uganda
Phone: +256 (41) 567259
Fax: +256 (41) 567635
Email direct from site:
r.buruchara@cgiar.org
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Grantee:
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CIAT
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Amount:
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US $449,000
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Duration:
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Three Years |
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Increasing Food Security and
Rural Incomes in Eastern, Central and Southern Africa through Genetic
Improvement of Bush and Climbing Beans
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Nineteen
Pythium species, including known bean pathogens, putative new
species and two potential biological control agents, were identified
by sequencing the ITS1 and ITS2 regions of the ribosomal DNA of 130
isolates associated with common bean affected with Pythium root rot
in Kenya, Rwanda and Uganda.
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Seven
locus-specific microsatellite derived markers that can distinguish
the main pathogen groups (Andean and Mesoamerican) of
Phaeoisariopsis griseola, the causal agent of angular leaf spot
disease, and between the pathogen groups found in Africa from those
found in Latin America
were developed
and are being validated before being widely used in pathogen
characterization
in Africa.
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Several
resistance genes against P.
griseola, that are controlled by major genes that are
either dominant or recessive; acting singly or duplicated, and which
may interact in an additive manner, with or without epistasis were
identified in 12 genotypes including Mex 54, an
important source of resistance in Africa, which appears to have more
(recessive and dominant) than one resistant gene.
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RAPDs, SSR and AFLP markers
linked to some of the angular leaf spot resistance genes were
identified in promising parental lines (Mex 54, MAR 1, G 10474, G
1090) and SCARs for some of these markers have been developed and
their utility for MAS is being evaluated.
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Several
populations were developed to transfer, combine and pyramid
resistance to angular leaf spot, Pythium root rot, fusarium wilt
into a number of locally adapted but susceptible commercial bush and
climbing bean cultivars.
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Two
workshops/courses have been conducted to train project and bean
networks partners on the use of biotechnological tools in bean
improvement: firstly, on application of molecular techniques in
pathogen characterization and secondly, in marker assisted selection
where, markers developed for ALS resistance were successfully
tested, potential for marker assisted selection breeding under
different settings evaluated, and an inventory made of the potential
of MAS in bean breeding in Africa, traits that are likely to benefit
from MAS, genotypes for which markers are available and when and
where markers have a comparative advantage in breeding.
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