From Evolution to Revolution: Accelerating Crop Domestication through Genome Editing

Author:

Kumar Kishor1ORCID,Mandal Swarupa Nanda23,Pradhan Bhubaneswar1,Kaur Pavneet4,Kaur Karminderbir4,Neelam Kumari4

Affiliation:

1. Faculty Centre for Integrated Rural Development and Management, Ramakrishna Mission Vivekananda Educational and Research Institute , Narendrapur, Kolkata 700103, India

2. Department of Genetics and Plant Breeding, Bidhan Chandra Krishi Viswavidyalaya, Extended Campus , Burdwan, West Bengal 713101, India

3. Department of Plant and Soil Science, Texas Tech University , Lubbock, TX 79415, USA

4. School of Agricultural Biotechnology, Punjab Agricultural University , Ludhiana, Punjab 141004, India

Abstract

Abstract Crop domestication has a tremendous impact on socioeconomic conditions and human civilization. Modern cultivars were domesticated from their wild progenitors thousands of years ago by the selection of natural variation by humans. New cultivars are being developed by crossing two or more compatible individuals. But the limited genetic diversity in the cultivars severely affects the yield and renders the crop susceptible to many biotic and abiotic stresses. Crop wild relatives (CWRs) are the rich reservoir for many valuable agronomic traits. The incorporation of useful genes from CWR is one of the sustainable approaches for enriching the gene pool of cultivated crops. However, CWRs are not suited for urban and intensive cultivation because of several undesirable traits. Researchers have begun to study the domestication traits in the CWRs and modify them using genome-editing tools to make them suitable for extensive cultivation. Growing evidence has shown that modification in these genes is not sufficient to bring the desired change in the neodomesticated crop. However, the other dynamic genetic factors such as microRNAs (miRNAs), transposable elements, cis-regulatory elements and epigenetic changes have reshaped the domesticated crops. The creation of allelic series for many valuable domestication traits through genome editing holds great potential for the accelerated development of neodomesticated crops. The present review describes the current understanding of the genetics of domestication traits that are responsible for the agricultural revolution. The targeted mutagenesis in these domestication genes via clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR)/CRISPR-associated protein 9 could be used for the rapid domestication of CWRs.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cell Biology,Plant Science,Physiology,General Medicine

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