4.7 Review

Genomic resources in plant breeding for sustainable agriculture

Journal

JOURNAL OF PLANT PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 257, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER GMBH
DOI: 10.1016/j.jplph.2020.153351

Keywords

Genomics; Sequencing; Genotyping platforms; Sequence-based trait mapping; Genomics-assisted breeding; Genomic breeding; Genomic selection

Categories

Funding

  1. Science & Engineering Research Board (SERB), Department of Science & Technology, Government of India
  2. Department of Agriculture and Cooparation & Farmers Welfare, Ministry of Agriculture Government of India
  3. Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, USA
  4. Hong Kong Research Grants Council Area of Excellence Scheme [AoE/M-403/16]
  5. Lo Kwee-Seong Biomedical Research Fund, Hongkong

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Climate change has had a serious impact on agriculture in the past 40 years, and there is a need to use genomic breeding methods to accelerate the development of crops with climate resilience and high nutritional value.
Climate change during the last 40 years has had a serious impact on agriculture and threatens global food and nutritional security. From over half a million plant species, cereals and legumes are the most important for food and nutritional security. Although systematic plant breeding has a relatively short history, conventional breeding coupled with advances in technology and crop management strategies has increased crop yields by 56 % globally between 1965-85, referred to as the Green Revolution. Nevertheless, increased demand for food, feed, fiber, and fuel necessitates the need to break existing yield barriers in many crop plants. In the first decade of the 21st century we witnessed rapid discovery, transformative technological development and declining costs of genomics technologies. In the second decade, the field turned towards making sense of the vast amount of genomic information and subsequently moved towards accurately predicting gene-to-phenotype associations and tailoring plants for climate resilience and global food security. In this review we focus on genomic resources, genome and germplasm sequencing, sequencing-based trait mapping, and genomics-assisted breeding approaches aimed at developing biotic stress resistant, abiotic stress tolerant and high nutrition varieties in six major cereals (rice, maize, wheat, barley, sorghum and pearl millet), and six major legumes (soybean, groundnut, cowpea, common bean, chickpea and pigeonpea). We further provide a perspective and way forward to use genomic breeding approaches including marker-assisted selection, marker-assisted backcrossing, haplotype based breeding and genomic prediction approaches coupled with machine learning and artificial intelligence, to speed breeding approaches. The overall goal is to accelerate genetic gains and deliver climate resilient and high nutrition crop varieties for sustainable agriculture.

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