Heliyon (Aug 2024)

Triumphs of genomic-assisted breeding in crop improvement

  • Vikas Mangal,
  • Lokesh Kumar Verma,
  • Sandeep Kumar Singh,
  • Kanak Saxena,
  • Anirban Roy,
  • Anandi Karn,
  • Rohit Rohit,
  • Shruti Kashyap,
  • Ashish Bhatt,
  • Salej Sood

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 15
p. e35513

Abstract

Read online

Conventional breeding approaches have played a significant role in meeting the food demand remarkably well until now. However, the increasing population, yield plateaus in certain crops, and limited recombination necessitate using genomic resources for genomics-assisted crop improvement programs. As a result of advancements in the next-generation sequence technology, GABs have developed dramatically to characterize allelic variants and facilitate their rapid and efficient incorporation in crop improvement programs. Genomics-assisted breeding (GAB) has played an important role in harnessing the potential of modern genomic tools, exploiting allelic variation from genetic resources and developing cultivars over the past decade. The availability of pangenomes for major crops has been a significant development, albeit with varying degrees of completeness. Even though adopting these technologies is essentially determined on economic grounds and cost-effective assays, which create a wealth of information that can be successfully used to exploit the latent potential of crops. GAB has been instrumental in harnessing the potential of modern genomic resources and exploiting allelic variation for genetic enhancement and cultivar development. GAB strategies will be indispensable for designing future crops and are expected to play a crucial role in breeding climate-smart crop cultivars with higher nutritional value.

Keywords