Farmer's Weekly (South Africa)

Rice-breeding breakthrou­gh offers hope of feeding billions

An internatio­nal team, led by scientists from the University of California, Davis in the US, has succeeded in propagatin­g a commercial hybrid rice strain as a clone through seeds with 95% efficiency.

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First-generation hybrids of crop plants often show higher performanc­e than their parent strains, a phenomenon known as hybrid vigour. But this does not persist if the hybrids are bred together for a second generation. So, when farmers want to use high-performing hybrid plant varieties, they need to purchase new seed each season.

Rice, the staple crop of half the world’s population, is relatively costly to breed as a hybrid for a yield improvemen­t of about 10%. This means that the benefits of rice hybrids have yet to reach many of the world’s farmers, said Gurdev Khush, adjunct professor emeritus in the Department of Plant Sciences at the University of California, Davis (UC Davis).

Working at the Internatio­nal Rice Research Institute from 1967 until retiring to UC Davis in 2002, Khush led efforts to create new high-yield rice varieties, work for which he received the World Food Prize in 1996.

One solution to this would be to propagate hybrids as clones that would remain identical from generation to generation without further breeding. Many wild plants can produce seeds that are clones of themselves, a process called apomixis.

“Once you have the hybrid, if you can induce apomixis, then you can plant it every year,” Khush said.

However, transferri­ng apomixis to a major crop plant has proved difficult.

In 2019, a team led by Prof Venkatesan Sundaresan and Assistant Professor Imtiyaz Khanday at the UC Davis department­s of Plant Biology and Plant Sciences achieved apomixis in rice plants, with about 30% of seeds being clones.

Sundaresan, Khanday and colleagues in France, Germany and Ghana have now achieved a clonal efficiency of 95%, using a commercial hybrid rice strain, and shown that the process can be sustained for at least three generation­s.

The single-step process involves modifying three genes called MiMe, which cause the plant to switch from meiosis, the process that plants use to form egg cells, to mitosis, in which a cell divides into two copies of itself. Another gene modificati­on induces apomixis. The result is a seed that can grow into a plant geneticall­y identical to its parent.

The method would allow seed companies to produce hybrid seeds more rapidly and at larger scale, as well as providing seed that farmers could save and replant from season to season, Khush said.

“Apomixis in crop plants has been the target of worldwide research for over 30 years, because it can make hybrid seed production become accessible to everyone,” Sundaresan said. “The resulting increase in yields can help meet the global needs of an increasing population without having to increase use of land, water and fertiliser­s to unsustaina­ble levels.”

The results could be applied to other food crops, according to Sundaresan. Rice is a genetic model for other cereal crops including maize and wheat, that together constitute major food staples.

Khush recalled that he organised a 1994 conference on apomixis in rice breeding. When he returned to UC Davis in 2002, he gave a copy of the conference proceeding­s to Sundaresan.

Co-authors of the paper [on the breakthrou­gh method] are Aurore Vernet, Donaldo Meynard, Delphine Meulet, Olivier Gibert, Ronan Rivallan, Anne Cecilé Meunier, Julien Frouin, James Tallebois, Daphné Autran, Olivier Leblanc and Emmanuel Guiderdoni, CIRAD and University of Montpellie­r, France; Qichao Lian and Raphael Mercier, Max Planck Institute for Plant Breeding Research, Cologne, Germany; Matilda Bissah, CSIR Plant Genetics Resources Research Institute, Ghana; and Kyle Shankle, UC Davis. Khush is not a co-author of the new paper.

The work was supported in part by funding from the Innovative Genomics Institute and the France-Berkeley Fund. ȊȲThis article was originally published on the ScienceDai­ly website. To read the original article, visit bit.ly/3CRHkeY.

‘THE INCREASE IN YIELDS CAN HELP MEET THE NEEDS OF AN INCREASING POPULATION’

 ?? PIXABAY ?? A new developmen­t could lower the cost of hybrid rice seed for low-income farmers worldwide.
PIXABAY A new developmen­t could lower the cost of hybrid rice seed for low-income farmers worldwide.

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