Taggin and Mapping of genes and QTL and molecular marker-assisted selections for traits of economic importance in bean and cowpea

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Details

Author(s):
J.D. Kelly; P. Gepts; P.N. Miklas; D.P. Coyne

Type of Document:
Scholarly Article

 

Publisher/Journal:
Field Crops Research

Date of Publication:
2003

Place of Publication:
Not Available

Description

Bean/Cowpea Collaborative Resesarch Support Program (B/C CRSP) scientists have successfully developed integrated consensus maps of the 11 linkage groups (LGs) in both bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) and cowpea (Vigna unguiculata L. Walp). The bean map is approximately 120 cM with some 500 markers and an additional 500 markers shared with other bean maps. The cowpea map spans 2670 cM with over 400 markers. In addition to molecular markers, both maps include map locations of defense genes and phenotypic traits for disease and insect resistance, seed size, color and storage proteins, pod color and those traits associated with the domestication syndrome in bean. Since the bean and cowpea maps were developed independently, LGs with the same number probably refer to non-syntenic groups. Map locations of major resistance genes in bean rust, anthracnose, common bacterial blight and white mold. Gene tagging and marker-assisted selection for disease resistance has progressed to a point where the indirect selection for resistance to a number of major diseases is now routise in bean breeding programs both in the US and overseas.

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