Mexico D.F., Mexico
July 1, 2004
Source:
CIMMYT
No single
strain of wheat, barley, or related species completely
withstands Fusarium Head Blight, a disease that is making
increasing inroads on health and harvests worldwide. A new
project offers better methods and broader gene pools for finding
genes to ward off the disease.
Fusarium
Head Blight (FHB), one of the most destructive wheat diseases in
warm and humid regions, seriously threatens wheat and barley
production around the world. Even worse, the toxins produced by
Fusarium fungus cause acute food poisoning in people and harm
animals that eat infected grain.
A new
five-year-long collaborative project between
CIMMYT and the government of
Japan aims to discover genes that control FHB resistance,
identify wheat germplasm that can be used in FHB resistance
breeding programs, and develop FHB resistant wheat by using DNA
markers.
Scientists
in Japan began conducting genetic and breeding studies on FHB
resistance in the 1960s, after an epidemic swept across more
than 400,000 hectares in 1963 and caused estimated yield losses
of more than 50%. More recent epidemics in 1996 and 1998
affected about 26% of the land in Japan. Developing countries
also suffer losses from FHB, and CIMMYT started its own breeding
program on FHB resistance about 20 years ago.
In the
United States, FHB is the worst plant disease to emerge since
the 1950s, according to the United States Department of
Agriculture. In the 1990s, epidemics in seven US states caused
more than US$ 1 billion in crop losses. Partly due to climate
changes caused by global warming and the increased use of
reduced tillage practices, FHB has become more widespread in
recent years.
Sources of
resistance to the disease have been elusive. Researchers have
never found an accession of wheat, barley, or their wild
relatives that is completely immune to FHB, according to
Tomohiro Ban, a scientist at Japan International Research Center
for Agriculture Sciences. A lack of good sources of resistance
and good methods for finding them prompted the government of
Japan to fund the new project with CIMMYT, which Ban is now
leading at CIMMYT-Mexico.
The genetic
constitution and chromosomal location of FHB resistance genes
are not well known, but current research suggests that several
quantitative trait loci or minor genes control resistance. DNA
markers could identify and evaluate these genes. It is hoped
that the project’s search for resistance genes will also advance
because of access to CIMMYT’s genebank, which has one of the
world’s largest collections of wheat and its wild relatives.
Researchers will be able to screen materials from a great
diversity of gene pools and environments.
“We are
going to use the untapped potential of these diverse genetic
resources and find new sources of resistance,” says CIMMYT
Director General Masa Iwanaga. Even more important, the program
could become the focus for a more organized worldwide effort to
combat the disease. “We would like to facilitate a platform for
international collaboration, because this is a global problem,”
comments Iwanaga.
For information:
Tomohiro Ban |