
Maize at CIMMYT’s Tlaltizapan station
is assessed and harvested. Genomic data from this experiment
and many others are combined on the drought consensus map. |
“Hot spots” in Maize for Dry Regions
in the Developing World
A new genomic map that applies to a wide range
of maize breeding populations should help scientists develop more
drought tolerant maize.
Throughout the developing world, drought is second
only to soil infertility as a constraint to maize production, and
probably reduces yields worldwide by more than 15 percent (more
than 20 million tons) annually. Lines have now been drawn on a new
battleground: a map of the chromosomes that shows important areas
that help maize resist drought.
Of the world’s three most important cereal crops
(rice, wheat, and maize), maize has the most complex genetic structure.
As maize has been bred and adapted to many different growing environments,
selection has produced a crop that contains significant differences
in levels of genetic diversity. But many genes and genetic sequences
should be the same or similar. Scientists are hopeful that genetic
traits for drought tolerance can be found in such shared genomic
sections, across a wide range of tropical maize types. A new consensus
map of genes across maize populations may be the key to identifying
universal genetic “hot spots,” those genomic regions
that confer drought tolerance in diverse settings to varying degrees.

The two “hot spot” regions shown
on this map represent the complete QTL results for nine traits
on a section of chromosome 2 for one experiment.
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“Are there any regions in the maize genome that
come out as ‘hot spots’?” Jean-Marcel Ribaut and
his team have asked. Known to scientists as quantitative trait loci
(QTL), these regions tell scientists approximately where the genes
determining a particular plant trait are located. The QTL is not
a gene itself but a genomic region in which genes of interest are
probably located. Prior genomic maps of QTLs for drought tolerance
in tropical maize applied only to specific maize lines or populations.
The CIMMYT team and partners have developed a single map that combines
available drought QTL data from many trials of different tropical
maize types in diverse environments. “Having all the QTL information
integrated into a single map should allow us to identify the outstanding
genomic regions involved in drought tolerance,” Ribaut says.
Scientists have measured drought related traits such
as ear number, chlorophyll, and carbohydrate content of maize plants
in the field, and have extracted and analyzed DNA from the same
plants in order to plot the traits on the genomic maps. Ribaut,
now Director of the Generation
Challenge Programme, and CIMMYT molecular geneticist Mark Sawkins
hope to link the traits they measured in the field with regions
in the maize DNA.
“The idea is ambitious,” says Ribaut,
“for it should allow maize breeders to select the right parents
for drought tolerant maize by ensuring they have these important
regions on their genome.”
With funding from the Rockefeller Foundation, members
of the project team will give courses on this approach in to NARS
scientists in Kenya and China over the coming months.
For further information, contact Jean-Marcel
Ribaut (j.ribaut@cgiar.org)
or Mark Sawkins (m.sawkins@cgiar.org).
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