A legume biofortification quandary: variability and genetic control of seed coat micronutrient accumulation in common beans

Publication Overview
TitleA legume biofortification quandary: variability and genetic control of seed coat micronutrient accumulation in common beans
AuthorsBlair MW, Izquierdo P, Astudillo C, Grusak MA
TypeJournal Article
Journal NameFrontiers in plant science
Volume4
Year2013
Page(s)275
CitationBlair MW, Izquierdo P, Astudillo C, Grusak MA. A legume biofortification quandary: variability and genetic control of seed coat micronutrient accumulation in common beans. Frontiers in plant science. 2013; 4:275.

Abstract

Common beans (Phaseolus vulgaris L.), like many legumes, are rich in iron, zinc, and certain other microelements that are generally found to be in low concentrations in cereals, other seed crops, and root or tubers and therefore are good candidates for biofortification. But a quandary exists in common bean biofortification: namely that the distribution of iron has been found to be variable between the principal parts of seed; namely the cotyledonary tissue, embryo axis and seed coat. The seed coat represents ten or more percent of the seed weight and must be considered specifically as it accumulates much of the anti-nutrients such as tannins that effect mineral bioavailability. Meanwhile the cotyledons accumulate starch and phosphorus in the form of phytates. The goal of this study was to evaluate a population of progeny derived from an advanced backcross of a wild bean and a cultivated Andean bean for seed coat versus cotyledonary minerals to identify variability and predict inheritance of the minerals. We used wild common beans because of their higher seed mineral concentration compared to cultivars and greater proportion of seed coat to total seed weight. Results showed the most important gene for seed coat iron was on linkage group B04 but also identified other QTL for seed coat and cotyledonary iron and zinc on other linkage groups, including B11 which has been important in studies of whole seed. The importance of these results in terms of physiology, candidate genes and plant breeding are discussed.

Features
This publication contains information about 287 features:
Feature NameUniquenameType
Zinc concentrationqZNCONC.Cerinza/G10022.LG04.cot.3QTL
Zinc concentrationqZNCONC.Cerinza/G10022.LG04.cot.4QTL
Zinc concentrationqZNCONC.Cerinza/G10022.LG05.scQTL
Zinc concentrationqZNCONC.Cerinza/G10022.LG05.sc.2QTL
Zinc concentrationqZNCONC.Cerinza/G10022.LG06.cotQTL
Zinc concentrationqZNCONC.Cerinza/G10022.LG06.scQTL
Zinc concentrationqZNCONC.Cerinza/G10022.LG08.scQTL
Zinc concentrationqZNCONC.Cerinza/G10022.LG09.cotQTL
Zinc concentrationqZNCONC.Cerinza/G10022.LG09.cot.2QTL
Zinc concentrationqZNCONC.Cerinza/G10022.LG10.scQTL
Zinc concentrationqZNCONC.Cerinza/G10022.LG11.cotQTL
Zinc concentrationqZNCONC.Cerinza/G10022.LG11.scQTL

Pages

Projects
This publication contains information about 2 projects:
Project NameDescription
Bean-Seed_coat_micronutrients-Blair-2013
Bean-Cotyledon_micronutrients-Blair-2013
Featuremaps
This publication contains information about 1 maps:
Map Name
Bean-Cerinza/G10022-BC2
Stocks
This publication contains information about 3 stocks:
Stock NameUniquenameType
CerinzaCerinzaaccession
G10022G10022accession
Cerinza/G10022-BC2F2:5Cerinza/G10022-BC2F2:5population
Properties
Additional details for this publication include:
Property NameValue
Publication ModelElectronic-eCollection
ISSN1664-462X
pISSN1664-462X
Publication Date2013
Journal AbbreviationFront Plant Sci
DOI10.3389/fpls.2013.00275
Elocation10.3389/fpls.2013.00275
LanguageEnglish
Language Abbreng
Publication TypeJournal Article
Journal CountrySwitzerland