Genetic Analysis of Host Plant Resistance to the Cassava Mosaic Disease
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University of Ghana
Abstract
The genetic control of resistance to the cassava mosaic disease (CMD) in some
African landraces, their relationship with the widely used resistant genetic stock,
clone 58308, and molecular markers associated with resistance to CMD in the
landraces were evaluated in this study.
The F-i progenies of 54 cassava crosses and their parents (clone 58308, six
improved clones and 15 African landraces) were evaluated in two genetic
experiments in three environments in Nigeria. Genetic analysis revealed that additive
gene effect was more important in the genetics of resistance to CMD among the
landraces, while both additive and non-additive gene effecsts were important for
clone 58308.
The segregating Fi crosses exhibited varying levels of resistance and susceptibility to
CMD suggesting polygenic inheritance. Resistant phenotypes were detected in the
crosses involving susceptible parents which suggests that resistance to CMD in the
clones studied is due to recessive genes and susceptible phenotypes in crosses
involving resistant parents suggested that the resistance genes are non allelic.
Positive transgressive segregants were also detected in some crosses. The number
of effective factors for resistance to CMD ranged from two to seven and was
contributed by both parents in a cross. Significant differences in the mean distribution
of F-i progeny disease severity scores further revealed allelic differences between
three improved clones and some landraces, and that expression of resistance is
influenced by the nature of the female parent.
Bulk segregant analysis (BSA) showed that an SSR marker SSR30-180 was
associated with CMD resistance in a cross between the susceptible clone
TMSI30555 and the resistant landrace TME7. Linkage analysis revealed that SSR30-180, which was donated by TME7, was 14.9 cM from a putative CMD resistance
locus, CMDRL. Marker-trait association detected by regression analysis further
showed that markers, SSR30-180, E-ACC/M-CTC-225, SSR119-A and SSR119
accounted for 57.41%, 22.5%, 32.24% and 37.83% of the total phenotypic variation
respectively, for resistance to CMD in the mapping population. The results further
showed differences between TME7 and six out of the 15 resistant clones used as
parents and checks in the genetic experiments with respect to SSR30-180,
suggesting that different alleles are involved in resistance to CMD. Two susceptible
clones TME31 and TME117 however, had the marker, which suggests that SSR30-
180 is not tightly linked to resistance, thus there is a need to saturate the map with
more markers.
These findings are useful in the selection of cassava parental clones for resistance
breeding.
Description
Thesis(PhD)-University of Ghana,2002.