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1.
Heredity (Edinb) ; 128(5): 291-303, 2022 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35383318

ABSTRACT

Climate change will have numerous impacts on crop production worldwide necessitating a broadening of the germplasm base required to source and incorporate novel traits. Major variation exists in crop progenitor species for seasonal adaptation, photosynthetic characteristics, and root system architecture. Wheat is crucial for securing future food and nutrition security and its evolutionary history and progenitor diversity offer opportunities to mine favourable functional variation in the primary gene pool. Here we provide a review of the status of characterisation of wheat progenitor variation and the potential to use this knowledge to inform the use of variation in other cereal crops. Although significant knowledge of progenitor variation has been generated, we make recommendations for further work required to systematically characterise underlying genetics and physiological mechanisms and propose steps for effective use in breeding. This will enable targeted exploitation of useful variation, supported by the growing portfolio of genomics and accelerated breeding approaches. The knowledge and approaches generated are also likely to be useful across wider crop improvement.


Subject(s)
Plant Breeding , Triticum , Climate Change , Crops, Agricultural/genetics , Genomics , Triticum/genetics
2.
Theor Appl Genet ; 117(8): 1335-44, 2008 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18769903

ABSTRACT

The construction of large-scale databases of molecular profiles of plant varieties for variety identification and diversity analyses is of considerable interest. When varieties of an allogamous species such as oilseed rape are analysed and described using molecular markers such as microsatellites, care is needed to represent the variety in a meaningful yet useful way. It is possible to characterise such heterogeneous genotypes by analysing bulked samples comprising more than one individual seed or plant, but this approach may result in complex microsatellite profiles. Intuitively it would be reasonable to represent a variety by the common 'major alleles' in a profile, but how to define these 'major alleles' remains problematic. This paper describes methods of analysing DNA microsatellite data that will allow independent and objective data production at a number of laboratories. Methods for establishing allele scoring rules (thresholding) are described and the effect of these rules on the utility of the data is discussed.


Subject(s)
Crops, Agricultural/genetics , DNA, Plant/analysis , Databases, Genetic , Laboratories/standards , Microsatellite Repeats , Alleles , Genetic Markers , Genotype , Reference Standards , Reproducibility of Results , Sequence Analysis, DNA
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