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Phenotype based clustering, and diversity of common bean genotypes in seed iron concentration and cooking time

Common bean is the world’s most important directly consumed legume food crop that is popular for calories, protein and micronutrients. It is a staple food in sub-Saharan Africa, and a significant source of iron for anemic people. However, several pests, soil and weather challenges still impede its p...

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Autores principales: Amongi, Winnyfred, Nkalubo, Stanley Tamusange, Ochwo-Ssemakula, Mildred, Badji, Arfang, Dramadri, Isaac Onziga, Odongo, Thomas Lapaka, Nuwamanya, Ephraim, Tukamuhabwe, Phineas, Izquierdo, Paulo, Cichy, Karen, Kelly, James, Mukankusi, Clare
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10174564/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37167229
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0284976
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author Amongi, Winnyfred
Nkalubo, Stanley Tamusange
Ochwo-Ssemakula, Mildred
Badji, Arfang
Dramadri, Isaac Onziga
Odongo, Thomas Lapaka
Nuwamanya, Ephraim
Tukamuhabwe, Phineas
Izquierdo, Paulo
Cichy, Karen
Kelly, James
Mukankusi, Clare
author_facet Amongi, Winnyfred
Nkalubo, Stanley Tamusange
Ochwo-Ssemakula, Mildred
Badji, Arfang
Dramadri, Isaac Onziga
Odongo, Thomas Lapaka
Nuwamanya, Ephraim
Tukamuhabwe, Phineas
Izquierdo, Paulo
Cichy, Karen
Kelly, James
Mukankusi, Clare
author_sort Amongi, Winnyfred
collection PubMed
description Common bean is the world’s most important directly consumed legume food crop that is popular for calories, protein and micronutrients. It is a staple food in sub-Saharan Africa, and a significant source of iron for anemic people. However, several pests, soil and weather challenges still impede its production. Long cooking time, and high phytic acid and polyphenols that influence bioavailable iron also limit the health benefits. To inform population improvement strategies and selection decisions for resilient fast cooking and iron biofortified beans, the study determined diversity and population structure within 427 breeding lines, varieties, or landraces mostly from Alliance Uganda and Columbia. The genotypes were evaluated for days to flowering and physiological maturity, yield, seed iron (FESEED) and zinc (ZNSEED) and cooking time (COOKT). Data for all traits showed significant (P≤0.001) differences among the genotypes. Repeatability was moderate to high for most traits. Performance ranged from 52 to 87 ppm (FESEED), 23–38 ppm (ZNSEED), 36–361 minutes (COOKT), and 397–1299 kg/ha (yield). Minimal differences existed between the gene pools in the mean performance except in yield, where Mesoamerican beans were better by 117 kg/ha. The genotypes exhibited high genetic diversity and thus have a high potential for use in plant breeding. Improvement of FESEED and ZNSEED, COOKT and yield performance within some markets such as red and small white beans is possible. Hybridization across market classes especially for yellow beans is essential but this could be avoided by adding other elite lines to the population. Superior yielding and fast cooking, yellow and large white beans were specifically lacking. Adding Fe dense elite lines to the population is also recommended. The population was clustered into three groups that could be considered for specific breeding targets based on trait correlations.
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spelling pubmed-101745642023-05-12 Phenotype based clustering, and diversity of common bean genotypes in seed iron concentration and cooking time Amongi, Winnyfred Nkalubo, Stanley Tamusange Ochwo-Ssemakula, Mildred Badji, Arfang Dramadri, Isaac Onziga Odongo, Thomas Lapaka Nuwamanya, Ephraim Tukamuhabwe, Phineas Izquierdo, Paulo Cichy, Karen Kelly, James Mukankusi, Clare PLoS One Research Article Common bean is the world’s most important directly consumed legume food crop that is popular for calories, protein and micronutrients. It is a staple food in sub-Saharan Africa, and a significant source of iron for anemic people. However, several pests, soil and weather challenges still impede its production. Long cooking time, and high phytic acid and polyphenols that influence bioavailable iron also limit the health benefits. To inform population improvement strategies and selection decisions for resilient fast cooking and iron biofortified beans, the study determined diversity and population structure within 427 breeding lines, varieties, or landraces mostly from Alliance Uganda and Columbia. The genotypes were evaluated for days to flowering and physiological maturity, yield, seed iron (FESEED) and zinc (ZNSEED) and cooking time (COOKT). Data for all traits showed significant (P≤0.001) differences among the genotypes. Repeatability was moderate to high for most traits. Performance ranged from 52 to 87 ppm (FESEED), 23–38 ppm (ZNSEED), 36–361 minutes (COOKT), and 397–1299 kg/ha (yield). Minimal differences existed between the gene pools in the mean performance except in yield, where Mesoamerican beans were better by 117 kg/ha. The genotypes exhibited high genetic diversity and thus have a high potential for use in plant breeding. Improvement of FESEED and ZNSEED, COOKT and yield performance within some markets such as red and small white beans is possible. Hybridization across market classes especially for yellow beans is essential but this could be avoided by adding other elite lines to the population. Superior yielding and fast cooking, yellow and large white beans were specifically lacking. Adding Fe dense elite lines to the population is also recommended. The population was clustered into three groups that could be considered for specific breeding targets based on trait correlations. Public Library of Science 2023-05-11 /pmc/articles/PMC10174564/ /pubmed/37167229 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0284976 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/This is an open access article, free of all copyright, and may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. The work is made available under the Creative Commons CC0 (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) public domain dedication.
spellingShingle Research Article
Amongi, Winnyfred
Nkalubo, Stanley Tamusange
Ochwo-Ssemakula, Mildred
Badji, Arfang
Dramadri, Isaac Onziga
Odongo, Thomas Lapaka
Nuwamanya, Ephraim
Tukamuhabwe, Phineas
Izquierdo, Paulo
Cichy, Karen
Kelly, James
Mukankusi, Clare
Phenotype based clustering, and diversity of common bean genotypes in seed iron concentration and cooking time
title Phenotype based clustering, and diversity of common bean genotypes in seed iron concentration and cooking time
title_full Phenotype based clustering, and diversity of common bean genotypes in seed iron concentration and cooking time
title_fullStr Phenotype based clustering, and diversity of common bean genotypes in seed iron concentration and cooking time
title_full_unstemmed Phenotype based clustering, and diversity of common bean genotypes in seed iron concentration and cooking time
title_short Phenotype based clustering, and diversity of common bean genotypes in seed iron concentration and cooking time
title_sort phenotype based clustering, and diversity of common bean genotypes in seed iron concentration and cooking time
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10174564/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37167229
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0284976
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