| Literature DB >> 31736995 |
Ramakrishnan M Nair1, Abhay K Pandey1, Abdul R War1, Bindumadhava Hanumantharao1, Tun Shwe2, Akmm Alam3, Aditya Pratap4, Shahid R Malik5, Rael Karimi6, Emmanuel K Mbeyagala7, Colin A Douglas8, Jagadish Rane9, Roland Schafleitner10.
Abstract
Mungbean [Vigna radiata (L.) R. Wilczek var. radiata] is an important food and cash legume crop in Asia. Development of short duration varieties has paved the way for the expansion of mungbean into other regions such as Sub-Saharan Africa and South America. Mungbean productivity is constrained by biotic and abiotic factors. Bruchids, whitefly, thrips, stem fly, aphids, and pod borers are the major insect-pests. The major diseases of mungbean are yellow mosaic, anthracnose, powdery mildew, Cercospora leaf spot, halo blight, bacterial leaf spot, and tan spot. Key abiotic stresses affecting mungbean production are drought, waterlogging, salinity, and heat stress. Mungbean breeding has been critical in developing varieties with resistance to biotic and abiotic factors, but there are many constraints still to address that include the precise and accurate identification of resistance source(s) for some of the traits and the traits conferred by multi genes. Latest technologies in phenotyping, genomics, proteomics, and metabolomics could be of great help to understand insect/pathogen-plant, plant-environment interactions and the key components responsible for resistance to biotic and abiotic stresses. This review discusses current biotic and abiotic constraints in mungbean production and the challenges in genetic improvement.Entities:
Keywords: breeding; diseases; insect-pests; marker-assisted selection; mungbean; stresses
Year: 2019 PMID: 31736995 PMCID: PMC6829579 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2019.01340
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 5.753
Resistant sources of mungbean against mungbean yellow mosaic disease.
| Genotype(S) | Resistant level* | Country | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| NM-10-12-01 | R | Thailand | |
| NM-2, VC-3960 (A-88), | R | Pakistan | |
| 014043, 014133, 014249, 014250 | R | Pakistan |
|
| 08 | MR | ||
| ML 1265, ML 1229 | R | India | |
| SML 1815, MH 421 | R | India | |
| BPMR-145, Vaibhav, Phule M-2003-3, TARM-18, Phule M-2002-13, Phule M-2001-3, Phule M-2002-17, Phule M-2001 | R | India | |
| EC300072, K141 | R | India | |
| LGG424B, LM108B | I | ||
| VC-6960-88, VC-6773 (B-G), VC-3960-89, ACC-12840014, VC-1089 A | R | Bangladesh | |
| NCM-15-11, AZRI-1, AZRI-06, NCM-21, 14063, NCM-11-8 | R | Pakistan | |
| NM 94 | T- Odisha and Andhra Pradesh MR- Tirunelveli | India |
|
| ML1628 | T | ||
| VRMG(g)1, LM 235 (GY), K 851, T 44, Nelambur, Sona Moong, AVRDC 1785/5, LM 150, Madura moong, TNAU 26, WBM 202 (GY), KM 2, TARM 22, HUM 1, LGG 429/1, TARM2/2, TARM2/1, NM 94, Bari mung 2 | R | India | |
| ML267, LGG407 | R | India | |
| ML-5, ML 405, ML 408, ML 337, MUM 2, VGG3 45, Pusa 8773 | R | India | |
| ML-818 | R | India |
|
| ML-9 | MR | ||
| GG-89 and GG-39, R: TM-98-50, TM-97-55, Co-5 | I | India | |
| IPM 2-14, PDM139 | R | India |
|
| HUM 1, HUM 12, DMS 03-17-2, Pant Mung 4, Pusa 9531, HUM 16, Meha, RMG 62, TMB 37 | MR | ||
| ML-881, UPM-98, | HR | India |
|
| Ganga-14, HUM-I, PDM-262, HUM-8 | R |
*(T, Tolerant; I, Immune; HR, Highly resistant; R, Resistant; MR, Moderately resistant).
Resistant genotypes of mungbean against fungal diseases.
| Diseases | Genotype(s) | Resistant level* | Country | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ML1464, ML1486, ML1194 and ML1349 | R | India | ||
| V1471, V2773, V2757, V5036 and V4718 | R | Taiwan | ||
| M5-22 and M5-25 | R | Thailand | ||
| BRM-188, C2/94-4-42, NM-98, 98-cmg-003, NM-1, NM-2, 98cmg-018, Basanti, PDM-11, CO-3, BARIMung-2 and VC3960-88 | HR | Pakistan | ||
| ML5, 453, 443, 515, 611, 610, 613, 682, 713, 688, 735, 728, 746, 759 and 769 | R | India | ||
| PANT M103, PUSA 105, PANT M3, PANT M2, ML 613, ML 173, ML 561, ML 347, PDM 11 and PANT M4 | R | India | ||
| ML1464, ML1486, ML1194 and ML1349 | R | India | ||
| GM-02-08, GM-03-03 and GM-02-13 | R | India |
| |
| LGG-460 | HR | |||
| ML-5, HUM-9, ML-4, HUM-4, SM-9-124, HUM-1, LGG-450, and SM-9-107 | R | India | ||
| 1224-52 and 12404 | HR | India | ||
| AKM 9910, ML 1299, IPM 02-5, and SML 668 | R | India | ||
| KMP-13 | MR | India | ||
| V4189, V2159, V4207, V4668, V4990 and V4574 | R | Taiwan |
| |
| V3912 and V4186 | R/HR | |||
| V1104, V4658, V4631, V4717, V4662, and V4883 | HR | |||
| M5-10 and M5-25 | R | Thailand | ||
| BPMR-145, TARM-18, Vaibhav, Phule M-2002-13, Phule M-2003-3, Phule M-2001-3, Phule M-2001-5 and Phule M-2002-17 | R | India | ||
| TARM-18 | R | India | ||
| LGG-460 | R | India | ||
| BL 849, BL 865, LM1668, PMB 63 and AKM 8803 | HR | India | ||
| KGS 83, Pusa 572, MH 96-1, GS 33-5, GS 21-5, AKM 99-4, COGG 936, TMB 47, ML 1299, MH 429, HUM 1, MH 429 and MH 530 | HR | India | ||
| C1-34-23, C1-32-22, C1-37-23, C1-28-20, C1-38-27, C1-44-31, C1-175-111, C1-41-28, C1-246-159, C1-236-152, C1-275-177 | HR | India | ||
| KMP-36, KMP39 and KMP41 | HR | India | ||
| ML1464, ML1486, ML1194 and ML1349 | R | India | ||
| MSJ 118, KM 4-59 and KM 4-44 | R | India | ||
| 40504, 40457, NCM 257-5, 6368-64-72 and NCM 251-4 | R | Pakistan |
| |
| NCM 252-10 and 40536 | HR |
*HR, Highly resistant; R, Resistant; MR, Moderately resistant; adopted from Pandey et al. (2018).
Resistant sources of mungbean against insect pests.
| Insect pest | Genotype(s) | Resistance level* | Country | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stem fly ( | V2396, V3495, V4281 | R | Taiwan | |
| G05253, G05776, G02005, G02472 | R | Africa | ||
| Co 3 | R | India | ||
| Chai Nat 72 (CN72) | MR | Thailand | ||
| V3726 | R | Myanmar | ||
| BM 4 and Vaibhav | R | India | ||
| Whitefly ( | ML 1, ML 6, ML 7, P 290, P 292, P 131, P 293, P 325, P 364, 11,148 | MR | India | |
| ML 1265, ML 1229 | R | India | ||
| NM 92, NM 98 | MR | Pakistan | ||
| 99.CMG-059, NM 2003-06, NM. 2003-24, NM. 2003-26, NCM. 258, PDM-54 | MR | Pakistan | ||
| VBN 2, CO 8, VGG10-002 | MR | India | ||
| KM 200 | MR | India | ||
| NM 04-2-38, NM 10-12-1, NM 46-5-2-21, NM 013, NM 0183, NM 04-1-11, NM 15-11 | MR | Pakistan | ||
| MH 3153, NM-92, NM-2006, Azri 2006, NM-121 | MR | Pakistan | ||
| TMB-36, RMG-1004 | R | India | ||
| PKV Green Gold | R | India | ||
| Bari Mung-6 | R | Bangladesh | ||
| MDGVV-16 | R | India | ||
| CO 3, CO 4, CO 5 | MR | India | ||
| Thrips ( | SML 77, UPM 82-4, Pusa 107 | R | India | |
| NM-92 | R | Pakistan | ||
| MGG 362, MGG 365 | MR | India | ||
| Spotted pod borer ( | LU-3, LU-15, LU-33, LU-173, LU-190, LU-196, LU-397, LU-426, LU-434 | MR | India | |
| J-1, LM-11, P-527, P-536 | MR | India | ||
| ML-65, B-101, B-103 | MR | India | ||
| PKV Green Gold | R | India | ||
| KM-9-128, KM-9-136, RMG-492, LGG-527, LGG-538, MGG-336, KM-8-655, and MGG-335 | MR | India | ||
| PDM-54-146, ML 131, ML 372 | R | India | ||
| JRUM1, JRUM11, JRUM33, DP1703, LAM 14-2, UPM-83-6, UPM 83-10 | R | India | ||
| RVSm-11-9 | MR | India | ||
| LGG 505, ML 267, LGG 502, LGG 407, LGG 460, LGG 485 | R | India | ||
| CGG 08-007, CGG 08-028, ML 337, ML 5, MH 85-61, ML 325 | R | India | ||
| PM 10-18 | R | India | ||
| Cowpea aphid ( | Bari Mung-6 | R | Bangladesh | |
| Phule M702-1 | R | India | ||
| Bruchid ( | V2709, V2802, V1128, V2817 | R | Thailand | |
| TC1966 | R | |||
| TC1966 | R | |||
| V2709, V2802 | R | Taiwan | ||
| Zhonglv 3, Zhonglv 4, Zhonglv 6 | R | China | ||
| Jangan | R | Korea | ||
| VC1535-11-1-B-1-3-B, VC2764-B-7-2-B, VC2764-B-7-1-B, VC1209-3-B-1-2-B, VC1482-C-12-2-B | R | Taiwan |
*R, Resistant; MR, Moderately resistant.
Figure 1Schematic representations of crop growth and development dynamics (Generic template; Connections between the two schematics are shown by the shaded boxes); [Hammer et al., 2010: https://doi.org/10.1093/jxb/erq095].
Figure 2Process chart of mungbean growth model (MungGro) [Biswas et al., 2018]
Tolerant/resistant sources of mungbean against abiotic stresses.
| Abiotic stress/s | Source of tolerance | Country | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Drought | K-851 | India | |
| Heat tolerance and elevated CO2 levels | EC693357, EC693358, EC693369, Harsha and ML1299 | India | |
| Drought | TCR 20 | India | |
| Drought | SML-1411, SML-1136 | India | |
| Drought | ML 267 | India | |
| Drought | VC 2917 (seedling stage) | China | |
| Drought | V-1281, V-2013 and V-3372 | Taiwan | |
| Waterlogging | V 1968, V 2984, V 3092 and V 3372 | Taiwan | |
| Drought | VC 1163 D, VC 2570A, | Taiwan | |
| Drought & Flooding | V 1381 and VC 2778 | China | |
| Low temperature | Perennial accessions of | Taiwan | |
| Salt | S72, H45, No. 525, Madira and RS-4 | India | |
| Salt | T-44 | India | |
| Salt | BARI Mung-4 | Bangladesh | |
| Salt | NM 19-19 | Pakistan | |
| Salt | TCR86, PLM380, PLM562, WGG37, IC615, PLM891, IC2056, IC10492, PLM32, K851, and BB92R | India | |
| Salt | EC 693357, 58, 66, 71 and ML 1299 | India | |
| Pre-harvest sprouting | Chamu 4 | India | |
| Heat | IPM 02-16, IPM 9901-10, IPM 409-4, IPM 02-3, PDM 139, IPM 02-1, IPM 2-14, IPM 9-43-K, PDM 288, EC 470096, IPM 2K14-9, IPM 2K14-5 | India | |
| Drought (maintaining cooler canopy traits) | VC-6173-C, IC-325770, ML 2082 | India |
Figure 3Exogenous RNA applications for RNA interference (RNAi) in plants against biotic stresses. (A) Exogenous artificial RNA application on the plant. (B) The exogenous RNAs transported into the cytoplasm. (C) The dsRNA or hpRNA molecules are recognized by a ribonuclease, DICER-like (DICER), which cleaves the dsRNA into siRNAs. (D) The siRNAs are then incorporated in the RNA-induced silencing complex (RISC) that guides sequence-specific degradation or translational repression of homologous mRNAs. (E) The components of the siRNA/mRNA complex can be amplified into secondary siRNAs by the action of RNA-dependent RNA-polymerase (RdRP). (F) Movement of the RNA silencing signal between plant cells and through the vasculature. Dashed arrows depict different steps of the RNAi induction process and dsRNA/siRNA movement between plant cells and plant pathogens. The solid arrow depicts the RdRP-mediated amplification of siRNA. Red arrows depict the local and systemic movement of the RNA silencing signal in the plant (From Dubrovina and Kiselev, 2019).