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Workshop on the use of Crop Wild
Relatives for Pre-Breeding in Potato

              Craig Yencho
           Department of Horticultural Science
             North Carolina State University
                      Raleigh, NC




                       CIP
                   Lima, Peru
                Feb. 22-25, 2012
Trait Mining in Potato CWR
Janskey-Yencho Pre-breeding Poll
(Jancho Poll – 15 breeders, 3 germplasmspecialists – all US)
1.   Which traits should pre-breeding efforts focus on in the
     context of climate change?
2.   Which CWR taxa are promising but have so far largely
     remained unexploited?
3.   Where do such taxa occur and what should priorities be for
     future collecting?
4.    What are the main obstacles for an increased use of CWR in
     potato pre-breeding (e.g. taxonomical issues; access regimes
     to PGR; funding constraints; etc.) and how can we overcome
     them?
CWR Utilization in Potato
 • Many potato breeding programs have not been heavily involved in using
   species in our breeding. Why?
    • When we incorporate this material we often take a few steps backwards in many of
      the commercial attributes we need in commercial cultivars.
    • To me it is like starting up another breeding program which requires additional
      funding and I don’t have the funding!!
    • CWR takes us on other paths usually not directly in line with cultivar development.
    • A program like mine is more oriented to developing finished cultivars, which are
      needed now. My clientele and funders want answers now…. not in 20 years
    • There are too many genetic barriers to overcome in utilizing these
      materials, especially for traditional breeding programs.
    • I have reservations about breeding for climate change. Not only will the changes be
      hard to predict but associated changes in crop species grown and varieties used will
      occur as a natural outcome to changing climate, plus current selection efforts will
      already be adaptive in nature to changing conditions. My best guess is to breed for
      wider adaptation, resistance to stress, and general hardiness.
CWR Utilization in Potato
• More pre-breeding is needed to provide new genetic material on an ongoing basis that can be
  incorporated into breeding programs.
• Good examples
    •   Incorporation of S. andigena materials into northern breeding programs – R to viruses, Late Blight, nematodes, etc.
    •   Frank Haynes (Deceased) - Long term selection and adaptation research (ca. 20yrs!) S. phureja and S. stenotomum now being used by
        Kathy Haynes (USDA-ARS) in 4x-2x crosses – PVX, PVY, processing and nutritional attributes
    •   Shelley’s recent cold chipper germplasm release (USDA-ARS)
    •   Chuck Brown’s nematode resistant parental material (USDA-ARS)
    •   Palta – Frost and cold tolerance in S. commersonnii and S. acaule
• You build it and they will come? In my view, demand for genetically enhance material (via CWR) will
  increase as more material becomes available.
• Really exotic materials are exciting, but the more closely related taxa (e.g. diploids in series tuberosa
  are a source of rich and interesting traits, which are relatively easy to cross and introduce.
• When germplasm releases are made available it would be useful to simultaneously provide, where
  appropriate, markers to assist in tracking the introgression/selection of the material.
• Need to explore enhancing current or new venues to summarize material available through pre-
  breeding that can be accessed by breeding programs.
• Allele mining? Is potato a good candidate crop?
• Need to define who and what our targets are…
    •   Poor vs wealthy, Nutrition vs. Diseases and Pests, Value-added vs Staple-Types?
• $$$ and time… - How much do we have to spend, how will it be targeted and for how long?
CWR Utilization in Potato
Chuck Brown (USDA-ARS, Prosser, Washington): Use of closely related wild spp?
• “Very definitely my feelings about uses of wild relatives have strayed afar from the corral of tuber
  bearers. I have recently been looking at Solanum sissymbriifolium. This a very spiny non tuber bearing
  Solanum. We are looking at it from the standpoint of eradicating Globodera pallida from fields in Idaho. I
  have engaged in a recurrent selection program to reduce the spininess and believe that I have made
  amazing progress. As I stroll through the greenhouse where I am making pollinations to produced
  Reduced Spine Synthetic II, I am taken with the plasticity of this species to genetic change with simple
  phenotypic selection. We inoculated this with Meloidogyne chitwoodi, late bight and powdery scab and
  Liberibacter. It seemed to be immune to all of these except Liberibacter. Furthermore it has non
  pathotype specific resistance to all Globodera spp. If we are looking for a realm of traits expressed in
  strong fashion not plague with the special relationships between resistance genes and effectors, this
  seems to be the place. What is keeping us from exploring this further? An old technique, really,
  protoplast fusion. Just try and find someone who is presently carrying out somatic hybridization. How are
  we to access this treasure trove of new genes? Collections. There are only five accessions of S.
  sisymbriifolium, one of S. aethiopicum, one of S. quitoense, and on and on. Collection.”

Walter De Jong (Cornell)
• Which CWR taxa are promising but have so far largely remained unexploited?
   • “This question assumes that one uses CWR primarily to extract alleles that confer an extreme (but
       desirable) phenotype in wild taxa. As Tanksley has shown in tomato and McCouch has shown in rice -
       there are lots of invisible beneficial alleles in just about any wild species.”
CWR Utilization in Potato
Where do such taxa occur and what should priorities be for future collecting?
We have enough potato germplasm to keep us busy for a long, long time.... The bottlenecks are
characterization and even more so - UTILIZATION! We've barely used what we've got -- why keep
collecting? In addition, it is not like we can't create alleles in the lab if we need to in the future. If you want
to preserve allelic diversity for the future, maybe do it digitally - that is, by doing a lot of sequencing, and
storing the results of what’s "out there in nature" in a database.

What are the main obstacles for an increased use of CWR in potato pre-breeding (e.g. taxonomical issues;
access regimes to PGR; funding constraints; etc.) and how can we overcome them?
• Adaptation! Currently, a breeder expects to spend 20-40 years getting all the garbage alleles out of their
   germplasm while you select for the (single) desirable allele you wanted to bring in.
• As time goes by, the gap between adapted and wild germplasm is increasing, making the task of
   introgression ever more difficult.
• Who is going to fund a 30-40 year effort nowadays?
S. etuberosum (etb)        S. tuberosum x berthaultii
• Chilean species          • Bolivian origin (ber)
• Non-tuber bearing        • Tuber-bearing
• Resistant to             • PI 265857
  PLRV, PVY, PVX             Insect Resistances
• PI 245939                     • Colorado Potato Beetle
  Insect Resistances           • Flea beetle
     • Green Peach Aphid        • Leaf hopper
     • Potato Aphid             • Mites
     • Leaf hopper         • A & B Trichomes
S. etuberosum
                    Tbr x ber

                +
Somatic Hybrids          1st Generation
    (E + TxB)
                    Etb 6-21-3




A05379-211

   4th Generation        2nd Generation
• Progeny from etb-ber somatic hybrid
 • Green Peach Aphid                                              John Trumble, UC-Riverside
       Reduced fecundity
       Growth inhibition
       Decreased nymph survival
       Novy et al., 2002. AJPR         79:9-18
 • Colorado Potato Beetle
       Reduced field defoliation
 • Wireworm
       Reduction in tuber damage                 Juan Alvarez,
       Comparable/better than Mocap                DuPont

 • Psyllid
       Insect vector of Candidatus Liberibacter psyllaurous (solanacearum)
       Vector resistance could aid in the control of Zebra Chip (ZC) disease
       Confirmed: Butler et al., 2011. Crop Protection 30: 1233-1238
PVY Resistance
 Transmitted through 2 backcross generations
 Resistance lost in 3rd backcross progeny
 Genomic Differentiation? E –vs- A
PLRV Resistance
 Expressed in 4 backcross generations
 Stable across years
 Segregation indicates resistance is monogenic
   • Reduced PLRV translocation to tuber
 Resistance gene Rlretb: Kelley et al. (2009) Mol
  Breeding 23:489–500
Killing temperature ( C)

        Categories                  Species (example)             Before Cold           After Cold
                                                                  Treatment*           Treatment**

Group I: Frost tolerant            S. acaule                            - 6.0               - 9.0

 and able to cold harden           S. commersonni                       - 4.5               - 11.5

Group II: Frost tolerant           S. sanctae-rosae                     - 5.5               - 5.5

 but unable to cold harden         S. megistacrolobum                   - 5.0               - 5.0

Group III: Frost sensitive         S. oplocense                         - 3.0               - 8.0

 but able to cold harden           S. polytrichon                       - 3.0               - 6.5

Group IV: Frost sensitive          S. tuberosum                         - 3.0               - 3.0

 and unable to cold harden         S. cardiophyllum                     - 2.5               - 2.5

       * Plants were grown in a regime of 20°/15°C day/night, 14 h photoperiod.
       ** Mature Plants were transferred to 2°C day/night, 14 h photoperiod, for 20 days.
CWR Utilization in Potato

• CWR’s are very important.
• Efficient and timely utilization of CWR’s is problematic.
• Collection is necessary, but characterization and evaluation may be
  more important due to segregation in accessions.
• Sequencing and allele mining should be considered.
• Traits related to climate change are important, but don’t forget
  nutritional and disease and pest resistance traits are also key to our
  future well-being.
• Long-term funding will always be needed.
• Who’s going to deal with the IP issues?
• Information management and curation and governance of such
• Conservation

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Craig Yencho's presentation in the framework of the expert consultation on the use of crop wild relatives for pre-breeding in potato

  • 1. Workshop on the use of Crop Wild Relatives for Pre-Breeding in Potato Craig Yencho Department of Horticultural Science North Carolina State University Raleigh, NC CIP Lima, Peru Feb. 22-25, 2012
  • 2. Trait Mining in Potato CWR Janskey-Yencho Pre-breeding Poll (Jancho Poll – 15 breeders, 3 germplasmspecialists – all US) 1. Which traits should pre-breeding efforts focus on in the context of climate change? 2. Which CWR taxa are promising but have so far largely remained unexploited? 3. Where do such taxa occur and what should priorities be for future collecting? 4. What are the main obstacles for an increased use of CWR in potato pre-breeding (e.g. taxonomical issues; access regimes to PGR; funding constraints; etc.) and how can we overcome them?
  • 3. CWR Utilization in Potato • Many potato breeding programs have not been heavily involved in using species in our breeding. Why? • When we incorporate this material we often take a few steps backwards in many of the commercial attributes we need in commercial cultivars. • To me it is like starting up another breeding program which requires additional funding and I don’t have the funding!! • CWR takes us on other paths usually not directly in line with cultivar development. • A program like mine is more oriented to developing finished cultivars, which are needed now. My clientele and funders want answers now…. not in 20 years • There are too many genetic barriers to overcome in utilizing these materials, especially for traditional breeding programs. • I have reservations about breeding for climate change. Not only will the changes be hard to predict but associated changes in crop species grown and varieties used will occur as a natural outcome to changing climate, plus current selection efforts will already be adaptive in nature to changing conditions. My best guess is to breed for wider adaptation, resistance to stress, and general hardiness.
  • 4. CWR Utilization in Potato • More pre-breeding is needed to provide new genetic material on an ongoing basis that can be incorporated into breeding programs. • Good examples • Incorporation of S. andigena materials into northern breeding programs – R to viruses, Late Blight, nematodes, etc. • Frank Haynes (Deceased) - Long term selection and adaptation research (ca. 20yrs!) S. phureja and S. stenotomum now being used by Kathy Haynes (USDA-ARS) in 4x-2x crosses – PVX, PVY, processing and nutritional attributes • Shelley’s recent cold chipper germplasm release (USDA-ARS) • Chuck Brown’s nematode resistant parental material (USDA-ARS) • Palta – Frost and cold tolerance in S. commersonnii and S. acaule • You build it and they will come? In my view, demand for genetically enhance material (via CWR) will increase as more material becomes available. • Really exotic materials are exciting, but the more closely related taxa (e.g. diploids in series tuberosa are a source of rich and interesting traits, which are relatively easy to cross and introduce. • When germplasm releases are made available it would be useful to simultaneously provide, where appropriate, markers to assist in tracking the introgression/selection of the material. • Need to explore enhancing current or new venues to summarize material available through pre- breeding that can be accessed by breeding programs. • Allele mining? Is potato a good candidate crop? • Need to define who and what our targets are… • Poor vs wealthy, Nutrition vs. Diseases and Pests, Value-added vs Staple-Types? • $$$ and time… - How much do we have to spend, how will it be targeted and for how long?
  • 5. CWR Utilization in Potato Chuck Brown (USDA-ARS, Prosser, Washington): Use of closely related wild spp? • “Very definitely my feelings about uses of wild relatives have strayed afar from the corral of tuber bearers. I have recently been looking at Solanum sissymbriifolium. This a very spiny non tuber bearing Solanum. We are looking at it from the standpoint of eradicating Globodera pallida from fields in Idaho. I have engaged in a recurrent selection program to reduce the spininess and believe that I have made amazing progress. As I stroll through the greenhouse where I am making pollinations to produced Reduced Spine Synthetic II, I am taken with the plasticity of this species to genetic change with simple phenotypic selection. We inoculated this with Meloidogyne chitwoodi, late bight and powdery scab and Liberibacter. It seemed to be immune to all of these except Liberibacter. Furthermore it has non pathotype specific resistance to all Globodera spp. If we are looking for a realm of traits expressed in strong fashion not plague with the special relationships between resistance genes and effectors, this seems to be the place. What is keeping us from exploring this further? An old technique, really, protoplast fusion. Just try and find someone who is presently carrying out somatic hybridization. How are we to access this treasure trove of new genes? Collections. There are only five accessions of S. sisymbriifolium, one of S. aethiopicum, one of S. quitoense, and on and on. Collection.” Walter De Jong (Cornell) • Which CWR taxa are promising but have so far largely remained unexploited? • “This question assumes that one uses CWR primarily to extract alleles that confer an extreme (but desirable) phenotype in wild taxa. As Tanksley has shown in tomato and McCouch has shown in rice - there are lots of invisible beneficial alleles in just about any wild species.”
  • 6. CWR Utilization in Potato Where do such taxa occur and what should priorities be for future collecting? We have enough potato germplasm to keep us busy for a long, long time.... The bottlenecks are characterization and even more so - UTILIZATION! We've barely used what we've got -- why keep collecting? In addition, it is not like we can't create alleles in the lab if we need to in the future. If you want to preserve allelic diversity for the future, maybe do it digitally - that is, by doing a lot of sequencing, and storing the results of what’s "out there in nature" in a database. What are the main obstacles for an increased use of CWR in potato pre-breeding (e.g. taxonomical issues; access regimes to PGR; funding constraints; etc.) and how can we overcome them? • Adaptation! Currently, a breeder expects to spend 20-40 years getting all the garbage alleles out of their germplasm while you select for the (single) desirable allele you wanted to bring in. • As time goes by, the gap between adapted and wild germplasm is increasing, making the task of introgression ever more difficult. • Who is going to fund a 30-40 year effort nowadays?
  • 7. S. etuberosum (etb) S. tuberosum x berthaultii • Chilean species • Bolivian origin (ber) • Non-tuber bearing • Tuber-bearing • Resistant to • PI 265857 PLRV, PVY, PVX Insect Resistances • PI 245939 • Colorado Potato Beetle Insect Resistances • Flea beetle • Green Peach Aphid • Leaf hopper • Potato Aphid • Mites • Leaf hopper • A & B Trichomes
  • 8. S. etuberosum Tbr x ber +
  • 9. Somatic Hybrids 1st Generation (E + TxB) Etb 6-21-3 A05379-211 4th Generation 2nd Generation
  • 10. • Progeny from etb-ber somatic hybrid • Green Peach Aphid John Trumble, UC-Riverside  Reduced fecundity  Growth inhibition  Decreased nymph survival  Novy et al., 2002. AJPR 79:9-18 • Colorado Potato Beetle  Reduced field defoliation • Wireworm  Reduction in tuber damage Juan Alvarez,  Comparable/better than Mocap DuPont • Psyllid  Insect vector of Candidatus Liberibacter psyllaurous (solanacearum)  Vector resistance could aid in the control of Zebra Chip (ZC) disease  Confirmed: Butler et al., 2011. Crop Protection 30: 1233-1238
  • 11. PVY Resistance Transmitted through 2 backcross generations Resistance lost in 3rd backcross progeny Genomic Differentiation? E –vs- A PLRV Resistance Expressed in 4 backcross generations Stable across years Segregation indicates resistance is monogenic • Reduced PLRV translocation to tuber Resistance gene Rlretb: Kelley et al. (2009) Mol Breeding 23:489–500
  • 12. Killing temperature ( C) Categories Species (example) Before Cold After Cold Treatment* Treatment** Group I: Frost tolerant S. acaule - 6.0 - 9.0 and able to cold harden S. commersonni - 4.5 - 11.5 Group II: Frost tolerant S. sanctae-rosae - 5.5 - 5.5 but unable to cold harden S. megistacrolobum - 5.0 - 5.0 Group III: Frost sensitive S. oplocense - 3.0 - 8.0 but able to cold harden S. polytrichon - 3.0 - 6.5 Group IV: Frost sensitive S. tuberosum - 3.0 - 3.0 and unable to cold harden S. cardiophyllum - 2.5 - 2.5 * Plants were grown in a regime of 20°/15°C day/night, 14 h photoperiod. ** Mature Plants were transferred to 2°C day/night, 14 h photoperiod, for 20 days.
  • 13. CWR Utilization in Potato • CWR’s are very important. • Efficient and timely utilization of CWR’s is problematic. • Collection is necessary, but characterization and evaluation may be more important due to segregation in accessions. • Sequencing and allele mining should be considered. • Traits related to climate change are important, but don’t forget nutritional and disease and pest resistance traits are also key to our future well-being. • Long-term funding will always be needed. • Who’s going to deal with the IP issues? • Information management and curation and governance of such • Conservation