
Aida Kebede, who is researching for her
PhD at CIMMYT, explains how pollen is collected and maize
plants are crossed in the doubled haploid breeding program. |
Doubled haploids speed development
of drought tolerant maize for Africa
CIMMYT is adapting an advanced technology—the
doubled haploid approach—to develop inbred lines of tropical
maize for sub-Saharan Africa. It promises to reduce costs and speed
the arrival of better-adapted maize for resource-poor farmers in
the world’s toughest environments.
CIMMYT scientists have begun developing drought tolerant
varieties of tropical maize for places like sub-Saharan Africa using
a high-tech approach—known as doubled haploids—previously
applied principally by commercial seed companies working mostly
on temperate maize.
“Haploid” refers to the number of chromosomes
in a reproductive cell, like sperm or ovum. In grasses like maize,
the reproductive cells—pollen and ovules—contain half
the chromosomes of a full-grown individual. Fertilization joins
the genetic information from the two parents, and offspring carry
paired sets of chromosomes, reflecting the diversity of each parent.
“Maize breeders working on hybrids—the
most productive type of maize variety and the one marketed by most
seed companies—must at some point create genetically-stable
and pure lines of desirable, individual plants, for use as parents
of hybrids,” says CIMMYT maize physiologist Jose Luis Araus.
Conventionally, breeders get the lines by repeatedly fertilizing
selected, individual maize plants with the plant’s own pollen.
The process requires expensive field space, labor, and time—normally,
seven or more generations, which represents at least three years,
even in settings where it’s possible to grow two crops per
season.
Purer, faster, cheaper
In the latter part of the 20th century, crop scientists developed
a quicker, cheaper path to genetically-uniform parent lines—though
a technically intricate method. The first step involves crossing
normal maize with special maize types called “inducers,”
whose pollen causes the normal maize to produce seed containing
haploid embryos. The haploid embryo carries a single set of its
own chromosomes, rather than the normal paired sets. The embryos
are planted, and subsequent treatment of the seedlings with a particular
chemical causes them to make “photocopies” of their
haploid chromosomes, resulting in a fertile plant endowed with a
doubled set of identical chromosomes and able to produce seed of
100% genetic purity. “The actual treatment, as well as getting
from the embryo to a reasonable amount of seed of the pure line,
is very complicated,” says Ciro Sánchez Rodríguez,
CIMMYT technician in charge of doubled haploid field trials, “but
when the process is perfected, it only takes two generations—about
one year—and the logistical advantages are tremendous.”

Vanessa Prigge working in the field at CIMMYT's
Agua Fría tropical maize research station. |
First extensive use in the
tropics
CIMMYT is implementing the doubled haploid technology on a research
station in Mexico, using drought tolerant plants adapted to sub-Saharan
Africa. “CIMMYT’s use of the practice is another example
of how we put advanced technologies at the service of disadvantaged,
small-scale farmers,” says Araus. “Among other things,
this represents a significant opportunity to increase the availability
of improved, drought tolerant maize varieties for sub-Saharan Africa,”
he says.
Commercial seed companies in Europe and North America
have been the main users of the doubled haploid technology, and
the inducer genotypes available are of temperate adaptation. “The
inducers perform very poorly in the tropical conditions of our Mexico
stations,” says Vanessa Prigge, a PhD student from the University
of Hohenheim working at CIMMYT to perfect the technique. To generate
inducers that work better in tropical settings, Prigge and colleagues
are crossing temperate inducers from Hohenheim with CIMMYT maize
from Mexico, Kenya, and Zimbabwe. “We expect to have tropical
versions of the inducers in a couple years,” she says.
Reaching farmers’ fields
Maize lines from this work will be used initially in the Drought
Tolerant Maize for Africa (DTMA) and the Water
Efficient Maize for Africa (WEMA) projects.
“This is a very exciting technology,”
says Aida Kebede, an Ethiopian PhD student from Hohenheim helping
to establish the doubled haploid technology at CIMMYT. “It
holds the key to addressing more quickly the persistent problems
of African maize growers: drought, disease pressure, and low productivity.
I’m happy to contribute!”
For more information: Jose Luis Araus, maize
physiologist (j.araus@cgiar.org)
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