Latest Publications
Core descriptors for in situ conservation of crop wild relatives v.1.

Authors: Thormann, I.; Alercia, A.; Dulloo, M.E.
Crop wild relatives (CWR) are wild plant species that are more or less closely related to domesticated species, include crop progenitors and are a potential source of traits beneficial to our crops. Given their importance for agricultural research and development, their conservation is of high priority, in particular their in situ conservation that allows continued evolution of new adaptive traits as well as the maintenance of the breadth of genetic diversity present in the many CWR...
Screening the banana biodiversity for drought tolerance: can an in vitro growth model and proteomics be used as a tool to discover tolerant varieties and understand homeostasis

Authors: Vanhove, A.C.: Vermaelen, W.; Panis, B.; Swennen, R.; Carpentier, S.C.
There is a great need for research aimed at understanding drought tolerance, screening for drought tolerant varieties and breeding crops with an improved water use efficiency. Bananas and plantains are a major staple food and export product with a worldwide production of over 135 million tonnes per year. Water
however is the most limiting abiotic factor in banana production. A screening of
the Musa biodiversity has not yet been performed. We at KU Leuven host the...
Diversity of the neglected and underutilized crop species of importance in Benin

Authors: Dansi, A.; Vodouhe, R.; Azokpota, P.; Yedomonhan, H.; Asogba, P.; Adjatin, A.; Loko, Y.; Dossou-Aminon, I.; Akpagana, K.
Many of the plant species that are cultivated for food across the world are neglected and underutilized. To assess their diversity in Benin and identify the priority species and establish their research needs, a survey was conducted in 50 villages distributed throughout the country. The study revealed 41 neglected and underutilized crop species (NUCS) among which 19 were identified as of priority base on 10 criteria among which included their extent and degree of consumption. Reasons for...
Foundation characteristics of edible Musa triploids revealed from allelic distribution of SSR markers

Authors: Hippolyte, I.; Jenny, C.; Gardes, L.; Bakry, F.; Rivallan, R.; Pomies, V.; Cubry, P.; Tomekpe, K.; Risterucci, A.M.; Roux, N.; Rouard, M.; Arnaud, E.; Kolesnikova-Allen, M.; Perrier, X.
The production of triploid banana and plantain (Musa spp.) cultivars with improved characteristics (e.g. greater disease resistance or higher yield), while still preserving the main features of current popular cultivars (e.g. taste and cooking quality), remains a major challenge for Musa breeders. In this regard, breeders require a sound knowledge of the lineage of the current sterile triploid cultivars, to select diploid parents that are able to transmit desirable traits,...
Chado controller: advanced annotation management with a community annotation system

Authors: Guignon, V.; Droc, G.; Alaux, M.; Baurens, F.C.; Garsmeur, O.; Poiron, C.; Carver, T.; Rouard, M.; Bocs, S.
We developed a controller that is compliant with the Chado database schema, GBrowse and genome annotation-editing tools such as Artemis and Apollo. It enables the management of public and private data, monitors manual annotation (with controlled vocabularies, structural and functional annotation controls) and stores versions of annotation for all modified features. The Chado controller uses PostgreSQL and Perl.
Selection and validation of reference genes for quantitative RT-PCR expression studies of the non-model crop Musa

Authors: Podevin, N.; Krauss, A.; Henry, I.; Swennen, R.; Remy, S.
Gene expression analysis by reverse transcriptase real-time or quantitative polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR) is becoming widely used for nonmodel plant species. Given the high sensitivity of this method, normalization using multiple housekeeping or reference genes is critical, and careful selection of these reference genes is one of the most important steps to obtain reliable results. In this study, reference genes commonly used for other plant species were investigated to identify genes...
Expression of a rice chitinase gene in transgenic banana (''Gros Michel'', AAA genome group) confers resistance to black leaf streak disease

Authors: Kovacs, G.; Sagi, L.; Jacon, G.; Arinaitwe, G.; Busogoro, J.P.; Thiry, E.; Strosse, H.; Swennen, R.; Remy, S.
Transgenic banana (Musa acuminata 'Gros Michel') integrating either of two rice chitinase genes was generated and its resistance to Black Leaf Streak disease caused by the fungus Mycosphaerella fijiensis was tested using a leaf disk bioassay. PCR screening indicated the presence of the hpt selectable marker gene in more than 90 % of the lines tested, whereas more than three quarters of the lines contained the linked rice chitinase gene resulting in a...
How effective are DNA barcodes in the identification of African rainforest trees?

Authors: Parmentier, I.; Duminil, J.; Kuzmina, M.; Philippe, M.; Thomas, D.W.; Kenfack, D.; Chuyong, G.B.; Cruaud, C.; Hardy, H.J.
Barcoding is a useful tool to assign unidentified African rain forest trees to a genus, but identification to a species is less reliable, especially in species-rich clades, even using an exhaustive local database. Combining two markers improves the accuracy of species identification but it would only marginally improve genus identification. Finally, the authors highlight some limitations of the BLAST algorithm as currently implemented and suggest possible improvements for barcoding...
Comparisons of protein profiles of beech bark disease resistant and susceptible American beech (Fagus grandifolia)

Authors: Masonm, M.E.; Koch, J.L.; Krasowski, M.; Loo, J.
Beech bark disease is an insect-fungus complex that damages and often kills American beech trees and has major ecological and economic impacts on forests of the northeastern United States and southeastern Canadian forests. The disease begins when exotic beech scale insects feed on the bark of trees, and is followed by infection of damaged bark tissues by one of the Neonectria species of fungi. Proteomic analysis was conducted of beech bark proteins from diseased trees and healthy...
Ethnobotanical factors influencing the use and management of wild edible plants of agricultural environments in Benin

Authors: Avohou, H.T; Vodouhe, R.S.; Dansi, A.; Kpeki, B.; Bellon, M.
This study investigates how the socioeconomic status of locals interacts with the cultural, botanical, and economic features of wild edible plants to shape the floristic richness and management options of these resources. We interviewed husbands and their wives in 60 households from three ethnic groups in central Benin. We found that ethnicity affected the composition of managed species at community level. Within communities, the richness and composition of species managed by households were...



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