| Literature DB >> 36159774 |
Kandhalu Sagadevan Dinesh Babu1, Vardhana Janakiraman2, Harunipriya Palaniswamy3, Lakshmi Kasirajan4, Raju Gomathi5, Thakku R Ramkumar6,7.
Abstract
Sugarcane (Saccharum spp.) is a special crop plant that underwent anthropogenic evolution from a wild grass species to an important food, fodder, and energy crop. Unlike any other grass species which were selected for their kernels, sugarcane was selected for its high stem sucrose accumulation. Flowering in sugarcane is not favored since flowering diverts the stored sugar resources for the reproductive and developmental energy needs. Cultivars are vegetatively propagated and sugarcane breeding is still essentially focused on conventional methods, since the knowledge of sugarcane genetics has lagged that of other major crops. Cultivar improvement has been extremely challenging due to its polyploidy and aneuploidy nature derived from a few interspecific hybridizations between Saccharum officinarum and Saccharum spontaneum, revealing the coexistence of two distinct genome organization modes in the modern variety. Alongside implementation of modern agricultural techniques, generation of hybrid clones, transgenics and genome edited events will help to meet the ever-growing bioenergy needs. Additionally, there are two common biotechnological approaches to improve plant stress tolerance, which includes marker-assisted selection (MAS) and genetic transformation. During the past two decades, the use of molecular approaches has contributed greatly to a better understanding of the genetic and biochemical basis of plant stress-tolerance and in some cases, it led to the development of plants with enhanced tolerance to abiotic stress. Hence, this review mainly intends on the events that shaped the sugarcane as what it is now and what challenges ahead and measures taken to further improve its yield, production and maximize utilization to beat the growing demands.Entities:
Keywords: Breeding; Genetic transformation; Genome sequencing; Marker-assisted selection; Nobilization; Origin and domestication; Sugarcane; Transcriptomics
Year: 2022 PMID: 36159774 PMCID: PMC9483297 DOI: 10.1007/s10722-022-01430-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genet Resour Crop Evol ISSN: 0925-9864 Impact factor: 1.876
Fig. 1Timeline of the anthropogenic intercontinental distribution of sugarcane. The major distribution routes were through India, then to the Middle East, Africa, Europe and finally to the Americas
Fig. 2Timeline of sugarcane. a. Progenitor grass species. b. Evolutionary split of maize. c. Evolutionary split of sorghum. d. Genus Saccharum pre-domestication. e. Selection and domestication. f. Breeding and improvement. g. Transgenic development. h. Omics research. i. market release of transgenic sugarcane. j. sugarcane with better traits
Major sugarcane producing countries
| Countries | Production (Tonnes) |
|---|---|
| Brazil | 746,828,157 |
| India | 376,900,000 |
| China | 108,718,971 |
| Thailand | 104,360,867 |
| Pakistan | 67,173,975 |
| Mexico | 56,841,523 |
| Colombia | 36,276,860 |
| USA | 31,335,984 |
| Philippines | 24,730,820 |
| Indonesia | 21,744,000 |
| World | 1,907,024,730 |
List of specific genes transformed to Sugarcane
| Name of the genes | Functional role | References |
|---|---|---|
| Kanamycin resistant gene | Bower and Birch | |
| Glyphosate tolerant gene | Wang et al. | |
| mutated ALS | van der Vyver et al. | |
| Confers resistance against herbicide glufosinate ammonium and can be used as an effective selectable marker gene in sugarcane transformation | Gallo-Meagher and Irvine 1996; Falco et al. | |
| Insecticidal endotoxin from | Arencibia et al. | |
| Insecticidal endotoxin from | Weng et al. | |
| Insecticidal endotoxin from | Cristofoletti et al. | |
| Insecticidal endotoxin from | Kalunke et al. | |
| Insecticidal endotoxin from | Qamar et al. | |
| Insecticidal endotoxin from | Kumar and Udayasuriyan | |
Snowdrop lectin ( | Lectin used against Woolly aphid | Zhangsun et al. |
AVAc-SKTI | Fusion insect resistant gene construct used to induce resistant against | Deng et al. |
| Potato proteinase inhibitor II | Used to induce resistance against | Nutt et al. |
| Zhang and Birch | ||
| truncated | Used against red rot fungal disease causing fungus | Viswanathan et al. |
| Used against red rot fungal disease causing fungus | Nayyar et al. | |
| Coat protein gene of | Used to induce resistance against | Joyce et al. |
| Coat protein of | Used to induce resistance against Sorghum mosaic Potyvirus | Ingelbrecht et al. |
| Bacterial | Used to produce drought tolerant Sugarcane. | Sugiharto |
| Trehalose synthase from | Used for the induction of drought tolerance in sugarcane | Zhang et al. |
| Kumar et al. | ||
| Reis et al. | ||
| Augustine et al. 2015b | ||
| Pea | Augustine et al. 2015a | |
| Scdr2 | Potential drought responsive gene in sugarcane varieties | Begcy et al. |
| P5CS | Used for the induction of drought and salinity tolerance in sugarcane | Molinari et al. |
| Used for the induction of cold tolerance in sugarcane | Belintani et al. | |
| Used to increase the sucrose content by overexpression | Groenewald and Botha | |
| Used to increase the sucrose content by downregulation | ||
| Used in doubling of sucrose content by targeting to vacuoles | Wu and Birch | |
| Down regulated via RNAi based methods for the possible reduction of lignin content in sugarcane | Jung et al. | |
| BAHD acyltransferase | Silencing of a BAHD | Souza et al |
Sugarcane databases
| Database | Data type | Weblink |
|---|---|---|
| Sugarcane Genome Hub | Genome | |
| GRASSIUS | Transcription factors | |
| SUCEST | Transcriptome | |
| ISAAA | Commercial GM events | |
| GrainGenes | Phenotypic and Molecular | Discontinued for sugarcane |
| SGDB | Germplasm | Discontinued |
| SymGRASS | Orthologous genes involved in arbuscular mycorrhiza and root nodule symbiosis | Discontinued |