TY - JOUR
T1 - Enhancing Nutrition
T2 - A Review of Provitamin A Carotenoid Cassava Breeding Initiatives in East Africa
AU - Abincha, Wilfred
AU - Dzidzienyo, Daniel Kwadjo
AU - Wesonga, Lilian Noela
AU - Mwimali, Murenga
AU - Ozimati, Alfred
AU - Kayondo, Ismail Siraj
AU - Ofori, Kwadwo
AU - Tongoona, Pangirayi
AU - Kivuva, Benjamin Musembi
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2024 Wilfred Abincha et al.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - Biofortification of staple food stands as one of the most reliable methods of alleviating vitamin A deficiency (VAD). Evidence suggests that introducing provitamin A carotenoid (pVAC) cassava into the diets of preschool and primary school children in East Africa has led to improvements in their retinol levels. Notably, Kenya and Uganda have initiated cassava biofortification programs in the region. These efforts involve the assembly and characterization of pVAC cassava germplasm, alongside the development of essential tools such as genomic prediction (GP) models and molecular markers for accelerating genetic gains in the biofortification programs. However, several challenges have emerged, including a negative correlation between carotenoid content and dry matter content in cassava roots, diseases, the absence of affordable high-throughput phenotyping methods, poor cassava flowering, poor pollen viability, low capacity in bioinformatics analyses, degradation of carotenoids during processing, and inadequate germplasm conservation facilities. To address these hurdles, cassava breeding programs in the region require enhanced infrastructure and human capacity to optimize efficiency in cassava biofortification with pVACs.
AB - Biofortification of staple food stands as one of the most reliable methods of alleviating vitamin A deficiency (VAD). Evidence suggests that introducing provitamin A carotenoid (pVAC) cassava into the diets of preschool and primary school children in East Africa has led to improvements in their retinol levels. Notably, Kenya and Uganda have initiated cassava biofortification programs in the region. These efforts involve the assembly and characterization of pVAC cassava germplasm, alongside the development of essential tools such as genomic prediction (GP) models and molecular markers for accelerating genetic gains in the biofortification programs. However, several challenges have emerged, including a negative correlation between carotenoid content and dry matter content in cassava roots, diseases, the absence of affordable high-throughput phenotyping methods, poor cassava flowering, poor pollen viability, low capacity in bioinformatics analyses, degradation of carotenoids during processing, and inadequate germplasm conservation facilities. To address these hurdles, cassava breeding programs in the region require enhanced infrastructure and human capacity to optimize efficiency in cassava biofortification with pVACs.
KW - biofortification
KW - cassava
KW - provitamin A carotenoids
KW - vitamin A deficiency
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105004651531
U2 - 10.1155/aia/9937876
DO - 10.1155/aia/9937876
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:105004651531
SN - 2356-654X
VL - 2024
JO - Advances in Agriculture
JF - Advances in Agriculture
IS - 1
M1 - 9937876
ER -