Abstract

The arcelin-phytohemagglutinin-α-amylase inhibitor (Arc-Pha-αAI) locus of the common bean, Phaseolus vulgaris L., encodes plant defense proteins with different modes of action. Introgression of this locus from resistant wild bean accessions into cultivated varieties is, in some cases, able to confer resistance to the Mexican bean weevil, Zabrotes subfasciatus (Boheman), but not to the bean weevil, Acanthoscelides obtectus (Say). With respect to the Mexican bean weevil, resistance may be the result of one or a combination of the insect inhibitory proteins at this locus. However, for the bean weevil, resistance behaves as a quantitative trait encoded by different loci. We studied the relationship between the levels of α-amylase inhibitory activity, the polypeptide patterns, and weevil resistance. We evaluated the αAI activities in 64 wild and cultivated bean genotypes with different levels of resistance to both bruchids and also studied αAI peptide patterns in wild genotypes with 3 different arcelin iso forms and in the back crosses of these 3 genotypes with ‘Sanilac’. Our results show that αAIs do not confer detectable resistance to either of the bruchids in any of the genotypes tested and is probably only a minor contributor to this resistance.

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