| Literature DB >> 35383318 |
Fiona J Leigh1, Tally I C Wright1, Richard A Horsnell1, Sarah Dyer1,2, Alison R Bentley3,4.
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.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35383318 PMCID: PMC9076643 DOI: 10.1038/s41437-022-00527-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Heredity (Edinb) ISSN: 0018-067X Impact factor: 3.832
Fig. 1A schematic showing key targets for photosynthetic improvement where diversity from wild relatives could be utilised to increase productivity or stress tolerance in modern wheat.
The flag leaf cross-section highlights important traits underpinning CO2 assimilation on a standardised leaf area basis. When considering photosynthesis on a plant or canopy basis, other targets for improvement include organ size, ear photosynthesis and CO2 assimilation across the whole canopy.
Monocot crops and their progenitor species or wild relatives that offer genetic diversity for targeted crop improvement.
| Crop | Progenitors | Breeding priorities linked to climate stresses | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Maize ( | Teosinte ( | Drought, heat, waterlogging | Mano and Omori |
| Rice ( | Drought, heat, flooding, salinity, C4 photosynthesis | Zhang et al. | |
| Wheat ( | Drought, heat, C4 photosynthesis | Covshoff and Hibberd | |
| Barley ( | Drought, heat, waterlogging, C4 photosynthesis | Setter and Waters | |
| Sorghum ( | Cold, drought, heat | Ananda et al. | |
| Pearl millet ( | Drought and heat | Sharma et al. | |
| Oats ( | Cold, drought and heat, C4 photosynthesis | Covshoff and Hibberd | |
| Rye ( | Drought and heat, C4 photosynthesis | Covshoff and Hibberd | |
| Finger millet ( | Drought and salinity | Mirza and Marla |