| Literature DB >> 35881573 |
Sarah Garland1, Helen Anne Curry2.
Abstract
As climate change increasingly threatens agricultural production, expanding genetic diversity in crops is an important strategy for climate resilience in many agricultural contexts. In this Essay, we explore the potential of crop biotechnology to contribute to this diversification, especially in industrialized systems, by using historical perspectives to frame the current dialogue surrounding recent innovations in gene editing. We unearth comments about the possibility of enhancing crop diversity made by ambitious scientists in the early days of recombinant DNA and follow the implementation of this technology, which has not generated the diversification some anticipated. We then turn to recent claims about the promise of gene editing tools with respect to this same goal. We encourage researchers and other stakeholders to engage in activities beyond the laboratory if they hope to see what is technologically possible translated into practice at this critical point in agricultural transformation.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35881573 PMCID: PMC9321377 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.3001716
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Biol ISSN: 1544-9173 Impact factor: 9.593
Fig 1The geneticist Lewis Stadler X-rays corn in hopes of inducing mutations.
From Popular Science Monthly, January 1932, 47.
What were scientists saying?
| Example quotations from leading scientists on the potential for emerging crop breeding techniques to expand genetic diversity | Year | Method referenced |
|---|---|---|
| It is a comparatively easy matter to produce any desired breed of animals or any desired variety of plants when the various characters desired can be found scattered in breeds or varieties that can be cross bred. Application of these principles [of mendelian inheritance] will undoubtedly play an important part in the improvements of farm crops and farm animals in the future [ | 1911 | Hybridization and selection informed by mendelian genetics |
| The study of [genetic] mutations, and, through them, of the genes themselves, has heretofore been very seriously hampered by the extreme infrequency of their occurrence under ordinary conditions, and by the general unsuccessfulness of attempts to modify decidedly, and in a sure and detectable way, this sluggish “natural” mutation rate. Those working along classical genetic lines may be drawn to the opportunity, afforded them by the use of X-rays, of creating in their chosen organisms a series of artificial races, it should be possible to produce, “to order,” enough mutations to furnish respectable genetic maps. Similarly, for the practical breeder, it is hoped that the method will ultimately prove useful [ | 1927 | X-ray radiation-induced mutation breeding |
| The ability to induce chromosome doubling [with application of a colchicine solution], therefore, is of importance to practical as well as to theoretical genetics. With increasing knowledge of the constitution of chromosomes and methods whereby their structure and behavior may be altered, there arises an opportunity for the genetics engineer who will apply knowledge of chromosomes to building up to specification forms of plants adapted to the surroundings in which they are to grow and suited to specific economic needs [ | 1937 | Colchicine chemical-induced mutation breeding |
| Genetically superior plants derived from modern crop improvement programs typically require a high level of crop management. Included in a management regime may be the input of increasingly expensive nitrogen fertilizers as well as the extensive use of pesticides and herbicides, all of which can result in toxic residue accumulation in the environment. In addition, the high degree of inbreeding and the narrowing of the genetic base of widely cultivated crops cause increasing concern about the susceptibility of crops to major disease outbreaks and imply that important genetic traits may be lost as world germplasm is reduced. With problems such as these, it is not surprising that the advent of recombinant DNA technology is generating excitement. A whole range of very specific plant genetic modifications can now be considered, with the use of methods that may someday generate a genetic diversity not naturally present in cultivated plants [ | 1983 | Recombinant DNA |
| The genetic bottlenecks imposed on our modern crops by the long domestication process have removed most of the genetic diversity available for breeding, which makes further improvement of elite varieties by traditional breeding technology a cumbersome process. CRISPR/Cas-based new breeding tools including multiplex editing, fine-tuning of gene expression, and de novo domestication now provide plant breeders with exciting new opportunities to generate genetic diversity for breeding in an unprecedented way [ | 2019 | CRISPR-Cas9 gene editing |