Breeding for the present and the future: achievements and constraints of conventional plant breeding and contributions of genomics to a new green revolution
Fecha
Directores
Handle
https://riunet.upv.es/handle/10251/31898
Cita bibliográfica
Prohens Tomás, J.; Fita, A.; Rodríguez Burruezo, A.; Raigón Jiménez, MD.; Plazas Ávila, MDLO.; Vilanova Navarro, S. (2011). Breeding for the present and the future: achievements and constraints of conventional plant breeding and contributions of genomics to a new green revolution. BULLETIN OF UNIVERSITY OF AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND VETERINARY MEDICINE. 68(1):26-33. https://riunet.upv.es/handle/10251/31898
Titulación
Resumen
[EN] During the last century, conventional plant breeding, mostly based in the evaluation
at the phenotypic level, has been very successful in increasing the crop yields and in consequence the
global production of food. Maize, rice and wheat, the three most important staple crops for mankind,
are typical examples of the dramatic increases in yield achieved thanks to the application of the
combination of new cultivars with improved cultivation techniques. Conventional plant breeding has
been based in developing efficient methodologies for exploiting the available phenotypic variation
present in the crops and wild relatives. However, the recent advances in genomics, which allow the
direct study of the genotype and its relationship with the phenotype, are bringing a new paradigm shift
in plant breeding. Developments in next generation sequencing (NGS) and bioinformatics, are
providing breeders with new tools, like large collections of markers which facilitate, among others,
developing ultra dense genetic maps, or obtaining new populations of interest in plant breeding, like
near isogenic lines (NILs), introgression lines (ILs), or chromosome substitution lines (CSSLs). Also,
new approaches like TILLING (Targeting Induced Local Lesions in Genomes) and EcoTILLING
(Ecotype TILLING) are allowing discovering genetic variants for genes of interest. All these genomic
tools are of great utility for plant breeding as they make possible genome-wide diversity studies of
genetic resources, the discovery of genes and QTLs for traits and interest, and marker assisted
selection (MAS) including backcross selection, pyramiding of genes, ¿breeding by design¿, or genomic
selection (GS). The availability and application of genomic tools is leading to a new Green Revolution
that, hopefully, will be able to cope with the challenges faced by agriculture in this century.
Palabras clave
Breeding, Genomics, Green Revolution, Marker assisted selection, Next-generationsequencing, Selection
ISSN
1843-5254
ISBN
Fuente
BULLETIN OF UNIVERSITY OF AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND VETERINARY MEDICINE
DOI
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Agradecimientos
This contribution has been partially funded by the Ministerio de Ciencia y Tecnología (AGL2009-07257).