Philippine Daily Inquirer

IRRI sharing data on rice with the world

- By Ronnel W. Domingo

THE INTERNATIO­NAL Rice Research Institute (IRRI) is sharing with the world the genome sequences of more than 3,000 rice varieties through the internatio­nal treaty on plant genetic resources.

According to the Laguna-based research hub, the move supports plans to set up a global data exchange system, dubbed Global Informatio­n System on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agricultur­e.

“We can’t expect every program, every gene bank in the world to redesign their databas- es to match some internatio­nal standard,” IRRI director general Robert Zeigler said in a statement on Thursday.

“What we need is... to create portals where everyone’s databases can talk to another,” Zeigler said.

The plan was announced as government­s and organizati­ons across the globe are storing genetic material in seed banks, although there is no single gateway to genetic resource data.

For example, the Norway-run Svalbard Global Seed Vault north of the Arctic Circle now holds at least 860,000 food crop seeds from all over the world.

The various efforts make it difficult for researcher­s and plant breeders to know what is held where and what genetic resources are contained in the seeds.

“The genetic informatio­n IRRI is making available to us... is a hugely generous show of support for our endeavors to make all relevant informatio­n on genetic resources on plant crops available for food security,” internatio­nal treaty secretary Shakeel Bhatti said.

According to IRRI, a genome sequence—each rice plant has about 400 million “letters” in its genome sequence—is like an inbuilt instructio­n book that tells living organisms how to grow and react to the environmen­t.

“To have so much informatio­n on rice, which is the basic food for half the world’s population, placed at the fingertips of everyone is a major step in securing food security for future generation­s,” Bhatti said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines