El Batán, Mexico
January, 2006
Source:
CIMMYT E-News, vol 3 no. 1,
January 2006
CIMMYT technician
Michael Kimani prepares maize breeders' samples for DNA
molecular analysis to unearth genetic information that
helps the breeders focus their work. |
A new DNA
detection service provided by CIMMYT and KARI responds to
African researchers’ calls for modern technology.
African maize
breeders now have access to state-of-the-art biotechnology tools
thanks to a service launched by CIMMYT and the
Kenya Agricultural Research Institute (KARI). Housed within
the laboratories at the
International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI)
headquarters in Nairobi, under the
Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA)-funded
Biosciences Eastern and Central Africa (BECA) platform, the
lab offers and trains researchers in the use of molecular marker
techniques.
The molecular
markers are DNA snippets that help researchers locate and select
for genes associated with traits of interest, including
resistance to pests and diseases, or tolerance to stresses like
drought. With markers, breeders can cut the time and money
needed to develop plant types that possess such useful traits.
Until now, this capability had been unavailable to scientists in
sub-Saharan Africa, outside of South Africa.
Led by CIMMYT
biotechnologist Jedidah
Danson and supported by the
Rockefeller Foundation, the service now has its hands full
of requests from breeders working with CIMMYT, national
agricultural research systems, local seed companies, and
universities. “They’ve learnt of the service entirely through
word-of-mouth,” she says. “It’s especially attractive because
current funding allows us to offer the service free, so more
breeders are exposed to the technology.”
Breeders using the
service are especially interested in finding ways to incorporate
resistance to maize streak virus, a disease endemic in much of
sub-Saharan Africa and in enhancing the nutritional quality of
herbicide tolerant maize, originally developed as part of a
package to control the parasitic witch weed.
“Marker assisted
selection is an important tool for breeders in Africa. CIMMYT
and KARI must be lauded for being the first in the region to
provide the service to public sector researchers,” says Richard
Edema, molecular breeder at Makerere University, Uganda. Edema
is also coordinator of the
African Molecular Marker Application Network, a consortium
of about 100 biotechnologists and breeders from across
sub-Saharan Africa.
Danson is building a database of markers for genes for
resistance to important pests and diseases, including maize
streak virus, gray leaf spot, the parasitic weed Striga, and
northern corn leaf blight. She also helps train breeders in the
effective use of markers. “Clearly, our partnership to support
African breeders was long overdue,” she says. |