Search

Peanut nematode resistance failures traced to seed mix-ups, not genetic change

Lamon S, Abernathy BL, Leal-Bertioli SCM, Bertioli DJ

Crop Improvement

If you grow peanuts or buy them locally grown, the resistance traits bred into modern varieties can quietly disappear through sloppy seed handling long before the seed reaches a farmer's field.

Tifguard is a peanut variety with a built-in defense against a tiny worm called root-knot nematode that attacks plant roots. Some Tifguard plants kept getting sick anyway, and scientists wanted to know if the plant's own genes were changing or if something else was wrong. It turned out that susceptible plants were simply mislabeled seeds from other peanut varieties mixed in during storage or handling, not a case of the defense gene mutating or disappearing on its own.

Key Findings

1

Susceptible plants lacked the A. cardenasii chromosome A09 introgression that confers nematode resistance, with no evidence of genomic instability or chromosomal rearrangement causing the loss.

2

Most susceptible lineages were closely related to Tifguard but missing the resistance segment; a smaller proportion matched known susceptible cultivars, pointing to seed mixture and possible cross-pollination.

3

Because resistance depends on a single chromosomal segment, even rare contamination events have large phenotypic impact, making marker-based purity testing at each seed-increase stage a practical safeguard as genotyping costs fall.

chevron_right Technical Summary

A peanut variety bred for resistance to a soil pest called root-knot nematode sometimes fails to resist it, and researchers found the culprit is seed contamination from other varieties, not a flaw in the plant's own DNA. This means quality control during seed production, not genetic drift, is the problem to solve.

description

Abstract Preview

Original paper

The Curious Case of Sporadic Nematode Susceptibility in 'Tifguard' Peanut (Arachis hypogaea): Seed Mixture or Genetic Instability?

The Runner-type peanut (Arachis hypogaea L.) cultivar 'Tifguard' carries an introgressed chromosomal segment on chromosome A09 from A. cardenasii that confers resistance to root-knot nematode (RKN)...

open_in_new Read full abstract

Abstract copyright held by the original publisher.

hub This connects to 11 other discoveries — Peanut crop-improvement, seed-saving, soil-health +2 more 5 related articles

Species Mentioned

Was this useful?

mail Weekly plant science — one email, Saturdays.

Share: X/Twitter Reddit
arrow_forward Next Discovery

Gene editing removes 97% of celiac-triggering proteins from bread wheat

It could mean that people with celiac disease — roughly 1 in 100 worldwide — may one day safely eat bread made from real wheat, without sacrificing the taste...

eco Peanut
Species
Peanut

The peanut, also known as the groundnut, goober, goober pea, pindar or monkey nut (UK), is a legume crop grown mainly for its edible seeds, contained in underground pods. It is widely grown in the tropics and subtropics by small and large commercial producers, both as a grain legume and as an oil...