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Background: Wild crop relatives have been potentially subjected to stresses on an evolutionary time scale prior to domestication. Among these stresses, drought is one of the main factors limiting crop productivity and its impact is likely to increase under current scenarios of global climate change. We sought to determine to what extent wild common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris) exhibited adaptation to drought stress, whether this potential adaptation is dependent on the climatic conditions of the location of origin of individual populations, and to what extent domesticated common bean reflects potential drought adaptation.
Methods: An extensive and diverse set of wild beans from across Mesoamerica, along with a set of reference Mesoamerican domesticated cultivars, were evaluated for root and shoot traits related to drought adaptation. A water deficit experiment was conducted by growing each genotype in a long transparent tube in greenhouse conditions so that root growth, in addition to shoot growth, could be monitored.
Results: Phenotypic and landscape genomic analyses, based on single-nucleotide polymorphisms, suggested that beans originating from central and north-west Mexico and Oaxaca, in the driest parts of their distribution, produced more biomass and were deeper-rooted. Nevertheless, deeper rooting was correlated with less root biomass production relative to total biomass. Compared with wild types, domesticated types showed a stronger reduction and delay in growth and development in response to drought stress. Specific genomic regions were associated with root depth, biomass productivity and drought response, some of which showed signals of selection and were previously related to productivity and drought tolerance.
Conclusions: The drought tolerance of wild beans consists in its stronger ability, compared with domesticated types, to continue growth in spite of water-limited conditions. This study is the first to relate bean response to drought to environment of origin for a diverse selection of wild beans. It provides information that needs to be corroborated in crosses between wild and domesticated beans to make it applicable to breeding programmes.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/aob/mcy221 | DOI Listing |
Plant Foods Hum Nutr
September 2025
Cape Horn International Center (CHIC), O'Higgins 310, Puerto Williams, 6350000, Chile.
Tofu from six different landraces of chilean common beans (Araucano, Cimarrón, Magnum, Peumo, Sapito, and Tortola) was prepared and analyzed for proximate and lipid composition, antioxidant capacity, and phenolic content. Tofu has higher protein and lipid content, lower carbohydrate and phenolic content, and shows antioxidant capacity. The highest total protein was found for tofu prepared from Cimarrón and Sapito beans.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Plant Sci
August 2025
London Research and Development Centre, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, London, ON, Canada.
Many market classes of common beans () have a significant reduction in crop value due to the postharvest darkening of the seed coat. Seed coat darkening is caused by an elevated accumulation and oxidation of proanthocyanidins (PAs). In common bean, the major color gene encodes for a bHLH protein with its allele controlling the postharvest slow darkening seed coat trait.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBreed Sci
April 2025
Tokyo University of Agriculture, 196 Yasaka, Abashiri-shi, Hokkaido 099-2493, Japan.
Japanese red or white common bean ( L.) cultivars, used to make sweetened boiled beans, are called "kintoki" beans. Kintoki beans are planted to precede winter wheat for crop rotation in Hokkaido, northern Japan.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Plant Biol
August 2025
Crop Science Department, Faculty of Agriculture, Damanhour University, Damanhour, 22516, Egypt.
Background: One of the most widely consumed legumes worldwide is the common bean. Abiotic stress factors such as heat stress significantly reduce crop productivity, and climate change models predict rising temperatures in many agricultural regions. In the 2021 and 2022 seasons, two field trials were conducted in the Wadi El Natrun Region, El-Behera Governorate, Egypt.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInsects
July 2025
Department of Ecology and Evolution, UC Irvine, Irvine, CA 92697, USA.
The common bed bug, L., is a pervasive pest of humans throughout the world. Insecticide resistance, cryptic habits, and proclivity for harborage on human belongings have contributed to its global status as a difficult pest to control.
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