Heliyon (Jun 2024)
Pyramiding aphid resistance genes into the elite cowpea variety, Zaayura, using marker-assisted backcrossing
Abstract
The cowpea aphid (Aphis cracivora) is a cosmopolitan insect pest that causes economic damage on cowpea. Although the pest persists at all the growth stages of the crop, in West Africa, aphids are the only major insect pests that farmers regularly control at the vegetative stage. Thus, deploying aphid-resistant crop varieties can reduce farmers' expenditure on insecticide. The availability of different biotypes of the pest and reports of resistance breakdown necessitates pyramiding of sources of aphid resistance to develop a more robust genotype for durable resistance. Two aphid-resistance genes, sourced from SARC-1-57-2 and IT97K-556-6, were introgressed through gene pyramiding technique into a farmers’ preferred cowpea variety, Zaayura, using marker-assisted backcrossing. A simple sequence repeat (SSR) marker, CP 171F/172R, and an allele-specific single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) marker, 1_0912, were used for foreground selection of the SARC-1-57-2 and IT97K-556-6 aphid resistance genes, respectively. A stepwise backcross approach was used to introgress the major aphid resistance QTL (QAc-vu7.1) from IT97K-556-6 into Zaayura using the marker 1_0912 coupled with intermittent screening under artificial aphid infestation. After the fourth backcross generation, three heterozygous BC4F1 of Zaayura/TT97K-556-6 were intercrossed to Zaayura Pali to develop intercross F1 (ICF1). Three true ICF1 hybrids allowed to self to produce ICF2. Five (5) out of 48 ICF2 plants which were genotyped with the two foreground markers had the two aphid resistance genes fixed in the double homozygous dominant state. For background selection, out of 192 allele-specific markers screened, only 47 polymorphic markers were identified and used for the background analysis of the pyramided lines. The recurrent parent genome recovery ranged from 72 to 93.8 %. ICF2_Zaa/556/SARC-P6 had the highest recurrent parent genome and the least heterozygosity among the five improved lines. The five pyramided lines showed superior resistance under artificial aphid infestation as compared to the two donor parents with damage scores ranging from 2.0 to 2.3. On the field, however, there were no significant differences between the pyramided lines and their recurrent parent for all the agronomic traits measured except for grain yield. The pyramided lines do not only stand the chance of being released as new varieties but are also valuable genetic resources for other breeding programs that seek to improve cowpea for aphid resistance.