The evolving role of genebanks in the fast-developing field of molecular genetics

The role played by genebanks as repositories of plant genetic resources has evolved since their inception because of the need to adapt to the changing demands of their different clients. The past 20 years have witnessed a significant unravelling of important pieces of genetic knowledge. As a result,...

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Autor principal: Carmen de Vicente, M.
Formato: Artículo preliminar
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2004
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/105196
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author Carmen de Vicente, M.
author_browse Carmen de Vicente, M.
author_facet Carmen de Vicente, M.
author_sort Carmen de Vicente, M.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The role played by genebanks as repositories of plant genetic resources has evolved since their inception because of the need to adapt to the changing demands of their different clients. The past 20 years have witnessed a significant unravelling of important pieces of genetic knowledge. As a result, the organization of DNA is now well understood, information on how genes function has increased, and the relationship between phenotype and genotype is better documented, forcing us constantly readjust the value we assign to genetic resources and tap new ways of better exploiting the wealth they represent. Genebanks may need to revise their principles, not because former tasks should be abandoned but because of the new light shed on genetic resources as well as the new clients that emerge. Contemporary clients seek expertise that ranges from traditional breeding to molecular biology and even state-of-the-art genomics. Genebank managers must accordingly offer a broader range of services, and staff must be capable of covering an overarching array of disciplines. Thus several issues must be addressed, such as the attributes that a genebank should maintain, the convenience of networking to outsource certain types of expertise and procedures, the gap this entire situation may create among genebanks, and the benefi ts genebanks offer in countries with varying levels of development. This paper addresses most of these concerns based on a consultation held with genebank curators, breeders, molecular biologists and geneticists. It aims to present not so much solutions as arguments that might steer a constructive exchange of ideas in coming years, so that a balance may be found between the need to maintain genetic resources and the required infrastructure and those for providing the additional services that modern science demands.
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spelling CGSpace1051962025-11-05T08:00:59Z The evolving role of genebanks in the fast-developing field of molecular genetics Carmen de Vicente, M. plant genetic resources gene banks germplasm storage The role played by genebanks as repositories of plant genetic resources has evolved since their inception because of the need to adapt to the changing demands of their different clients. The past 20 years have witnessed a significant unravelling of important pieces of genetic knowledge. As a result, the organization of DNA is now well understood, information on how genes function has increased, and the relationship between phenotype and genotype is better documented, forcing us constantly readjust the value we assign to genetic resources and tap new ways of better exploiting the wealth they represent. Genebanks may need to revise their principles, not because former tasks should be abandoned but because of the new light shed on genetic resources as well as the new clients that emerge. Contemporary clients seek expertise that ranges from traditional breeding to molecular biology and even state-of-the-art genomics. Genebank managers must accordingly offer a broader range of services, and staff must be capable of covering an overarching array of disciplines. Thus several issues must be addressed, such as the attributes that a genebank should maintain, the convenience of networking to outsource certain types of expertise and procedures, the gap this entire situation may create among genebanks, and the benefi ts genebanks offer in countries with varying levels of development. This paper addresses most of these concerns based on a consultation held with genebank curators, breeders, molecular biologists and geneticists. It aims to present not so much solutions as arguments that might steer a constructive exchange of ideas in coming years, so that a balance may be found between the need to maintain genetic resources and the required infrastructure and those for providing the additional services that modern science demands. 2004 2019-10-15T15:45:05Z 2019-10-15T15:45:05Z Working Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/105196 en Open Access application/pdf Carmen de Vicente, M. (ed.) (2004) The evolving role of genebanks in the fast-developing field of molecular genetics. Issues in Genetic Resources ; No. 11 - August 2004 n. 54 p. ISBN: 978-92-9043-623-2, ISBN: 92-9043-623-9
spellingShingle plant genetic resources
gene banks
germplasm
storage
Carmen de Vicente, M.
The evolving role of genebanks in the fast-developing field of molecular genetics
title The evolving role of genebanks in the fast-developing field of molecular genetics
title_full The evolving role of genebanks in the fast-developing field of molecular genetics
title_fullStr The evolving role of genebanks in the fast-developing field of molecular genetics
title_full_unstemmed The evolving role of genebanks in the fast-developing field of molecular genetics
title_short The evolving role of genebanks in the fast-developing field of molecular genetics
title_sort evolving role of genebanks in the fast developing field of molecular genetics
topic plant genetic resources
gene banks
germplasm
storage
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/105196
work_keys_str_mv AT carmendevicentem theevolvingroleofgenebanksinthefastdevelopingfieldofmoleculargenetics
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