Macharia Mercy Wairimu, Caproni Leonardo, Solemanegy Marta, Takele Robel, Chiulele Rogerio Marcos, Munisse Paulino, Amane Manuel, Pè Mario Enrico, Buizza Roberto, Dell'Acqua Matteo
Institute of Plant Sciences, Scuola Superiore Sant'Anna, Pisa, Italy.
Instituto de Investigação Agrária de Moçambique, Maputo, Mozambique.
Commun Biol. 2025 May 30;8(1):834. doi: 10.1038/s42003-025-08227-0.
Large untapped potential for local climate adaptation is present in plant genetic resources maintained by smallholder farmers in Southern Africa. Cowpea (Vigna unguiculata L.Walp.), a staple crop for local farmers in the arid and semiarid regions of Southern Africa, is mostly unexplored by modern breeding approaches. In this paper, we assemble and characterize a collection of 389 cowpea accessions from Southern Africa, mainly landraces, including the entire ex-situ collection from the national Mozambique genebank. We use a genotyping-by-sequencing approach to describe the diversity in the collection and we concurrently characterize historical and projected climate at sampling points of landraces in search of genomic signatures of local adaptation. Our results show unique cowpea diversity in Mozambique, which can be partially put in relation with bioclimatic variation. The genotype-environment association approaches, Latent Factor Mixed Models (LFMM) and partial Redundancy Analysis (pRDA) allowed us to identify 36 genomic loci potentially involved in local climate adaptation. This included a region on chromosome 7 tagging four candidate genes linked to flowering and including a homolog of GIGANTEA, a gene regulating flowering time in response to day length and temperature in Arabidopsis. Finally, we estimated cowpea landraces adaptation to projected climate in the region, highlighting regions of maladaptation in southern Tanzania and Zimbabwe. Our results show that genetic resources maintained by farmers in Southern Africa bear traits for local climate adaptation and may contribute to enhancing the adaptability of cowpea to a shifting climate.
南部非洲小农所保存的植物遗传资源在当地气候适应方面具有巨大的未开发潜力。豇豆(Vigna unguiculata L.Walp.)是南部非洲干旱和半干旱地区当地农民的主要作物,但现代育种方法对其研究甚少。在本文中,我们收集并描述了来自南部非洲的389份豇豆种质资源,主要是地方品种,包括莫桑比克国家基因库的全部异地保存种质。我们采用简化基因组测序方法来描述该种质资源的多样性,并同时对地方品种采样点的历史和预测气候进行表征,以寻找当地适应性的基因组特征。我们的结果显示了莫桑比克豇豆的独特多样性,其部分可与生物气候变异相关联。基因型 - 环境关联方法,即潜在因子混合模型(LFMM)和偏冗余分析(pRDA),使我们能够识别出36个可能参与当地气候适应的基因组位点。这包括7号染色体上的一个区域,该区域标记了四个与开花相关的候选基因,其中包括一个拟南芥中响应日长和温度调节开花时间的基因GIGANTEA的同源基因。最后,我们估计了豇豆地方品种对该地区预测气候的适应性,突出了坦桑尼亚南部和津巴布韦适应不良的地区。我们的结果表明,南部非洲农民所保存的遗传资源具有当地气候适应的特性,可能有助于提高豇豆对气候变化的适应性。