Potential role of transgenic approaches in the control of cowpea insect pests

Crops' incompatibility makes conventional breeding approaches untenable in transferring available insect resistance From wild Vigna sp. into cowpea. The alternative recourse is to isolate and transfer alien resistance genes using genetic transformation. This has the added advantage of using useful g...

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Main Author: Machuka, J.
Format: Conference Paper
Language:Inglés
Published: 2002
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/100008
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author Machuka, J.
author_browse Machuka, J.
author_facet Machuka, J.
author_sort Machuka, J.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Crops' incompatibility makes conventional breeding approaches untenable in transferring available insect resistance From wild Vigna sp. into cowpea. The alternative recourse is to isolate and transfer alien resistance genes using genetic transformation. This has the added advantage of using useful genes from distantly related organisms to control cowpea pests. Artificial diet bioassays carried out on the Maruca pod borer, pod sucking bugs, and cowpea weevils indicate that these insects can be controlled by Bacillus thuringiensis crystal proteins, plant lectins, protease, a-amylase inhibitors, chitinascs, and/or ribosome-inactivating proteins. The challenge now is to express the genes encoding these proteins in transgenic cowpea and hope that what happens in artificial diets will, at least in some cases, be replicated in transgenics. Other candidate genes include enzymes encoding biochemical pathways in secondary metabolism. It can be anticipated that useful information emerging from current global genomics efforts in crop species, including model legumes, will have a bearing on cowpea improvement through genetic engineering. What cowpea researchers need to do now is develop a comprehensive pest resistance management strategy. Such a strategy must take into account criteria such as transformation of elite cowpea lines that are adapted to each of
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spelling CGSpace1000082023-06-08T20:44:40Z Potential role of transgenic approaches in the control of cowpea insect pests Machuka, J. bioassays cowpeas legumes wheat germ Crops' incompatibility makes conventional breeding approaches untenable in transferring available insect resistance From wild Vigna sp. into cowpea. The alternative recourse is to isolate and transfer alien resistance genes using genetic transformation. This has the added advantage of using useful genes from distantly related organisms to control cowpea pests. Artificial diet bioassays carried out on the Maruca pod borer, pod sucking bugs, and cowpea weevils indicate that these insects can be controlled by Bacillus thuringiensis crystal proteins, plant lectins, protease, a-amylase inhibitors, chitinascs, and/or ribosome-inactivating proteins. The challenge now is to express the genes encoding these proteins in transgenic cowpea and hope that what happens in artificial diets will, at least in some cases, be replicated in transgenics. Other candidate genes include enzymes encoding biochemical pathways in secondary metabolism. It can be anticipated that useful information emerging from current global genomics efforts in crop species, including model legumes, will have a bearing on cowpea improvement through genetic engineering. What cowpea researchers need to do now is develop a comprehensive pest resistance management strategy. Such a strategy must take into account criteria such as transformation of elite cowpea lines that are adapted to each of 2002 2019-03-03T05:54:42Z 2019-03-03T05:54:42Z Conference Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/100008 en Limited Access Machuka, J. (2002). Potential role of transgenic approaches in the control of cowpea insect pests. In C.A. Fatokun, S.A. Tarawali, B.B. Singh, P.M. Kormawa and M. Tamo, Challenges and opportunities for enhancing sustainable cowpea production. Proceedings of the World Cowpea Conference III held at the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA), Ibadan, Nigeria, 4–8 September 2000. Ibadan, Nigeria: IITA. (p. 213-232).
spellingShingle bioassays
cowpeas
legumes
wheat germ
Machuka, J.
Potential role of transgenic approaches in the control of cowpea insect pests
title Potential role of transgenic approaches in the control of cowpea insect pests
title_full Potential role of transgenic approaches in the control of cowpea insect pests
title_fullStr Potential role of transgenic approaches in the control of cowpea insect pests
title_full_unstemmed Potential role of transgenic approaches in the control of cowpea insect pests
title_short Potential role of transgenic approaches in the control of cowpea insect pests
title_sort potential role of transgenic approaches in the control of cowpea insect pests
topic bioassays
cowpeas
legumes
wheat germ
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/100008
work_keys_str_mv AT machukaj potentialroleoftransgenicapproachesinthecontrolofcowpeainsectpests