Genomic approaches for improving grain zinc and iron content in wheat

More than three billion people worldwide suffer from iron deficiency associated anemia and an equal number people suffer from zinc deficiency. These conditions are more prevalent in Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia. In developing countries, children under the age of five with stunted growth and pre...

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Main Authors: Roy, Chandan, Kumar, Sudhir, Ranjan, Rakesh Deo, Kumhar, Sita Ram, Govindan, Velu
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Frontiers Media 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/127590
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author Roy, Chandan
Kumar, Sudhir
Ranjan, Rakesh Deo
Kumhar, Sita Ram
Govindan, Velu
author_browse Govindan, Velu
Kumar, Sudhir
Kumhar, Sita Ram
Ranjan, Rakesh Deo
Roy, Chandan
author_facet Roy, Chandan
Kumar, Sudhir
Ranjan, Rakesh Deo
Kumhar, Sita Ram
Govindan, Velu
author_sort Roy, Chandan
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description More than three billion people worldwide suffer from iron deficiency associated anemia and an equal number people suffer from zinc deficiency. These conditions are more prevalent in Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia. In developing countries, children under the age of five with stunted growth and pregnant or lactating women were found to be at high risk of zinc and iron deficiencies. Biofortification, defined as breeding to develop varieties of staple food crops whose grain contains higher levels of micronutrients such as iron and zinc, are one of the most promising, cost-effective and sustainable ways to improve the health in resource-poor households, particularly in rural areas where families consume some part of what they grow. Biofortification through conventional breeding in wheat, particularly for grain zinc and iron, have made significant contributions, transferring important genes and quantitative trait loci (QTLs) from wild and related species into cultivated wheat. Nonetheless, the quantitative, genetically complex nature of iron and zinc levels in wheat grain limits progress through conventional breeding, making it difficult to attain genetic gain both for yield and grain mineral concentrations. Wheat biofortification can be achieved by enhancing mineral uptake, source-to-sink translocation of minerals and their deposition into grains, and the bioavailability of the minerals. A number of QTLs with major and minor effects for those traits have been detected in wheat; introducing the most effective into breeding lines will increase grain zinc and iron concentrations. New approaches to achieve this include marker assisted selection and genomic selection. Faster breeding approaches need to be combined to simultaneously increase grain mineral content and yield in wheat breeding lines.
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spelling CGSpace1275902025-12-08T10:29:22Z Genomic approaches for improving grain zinc and iron content in wheat Roy, Chandan Kumar, Sudhir Ranjan, Rakesh Deo Kumhar, Sita Ram Govindan, Velu biofortification marker-assisted selection malnutrition breeding quantitative trait loci mapping speed breeding zinc iron wheat More than three billion people worldwide suffer from iron deficiency associated anemia and an equal number people suffer from zinc deficiency. These conditions are more prevalent in Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia. In developing countries, children under the age of five with stunted growth and pregnant or lactating women were found to be at high risk of zinc and iron deficiencies. Biofortification, defined as breeding to develop varieties of staple food crops whose grain contains higher levels of micronutrients such as iron and zinc, are one of the most promising, cost-effective and sustainable ways to improve the health in resource-poor households, particularly in rural areas where families consume some part of what they grow. Biofortification through conventional breeding in wheat, particularly for grain zinc and iron, have made significant contributions, transferring important genes and quantitative trait loci (QTLs) from wild and related species into cultivated wheat. Nonetheless, the quantitative, genetically complex nature of iron and zinc levels in wheat grain limits progress through conventional breeding, making it difficult to attain genetic gain both for yield and grain mineral concentrations. Wheat biofortification can be achieved by enhancing mineral uptake, source-to-sink translocation of minerals and their deposition into grains, and the bioavailability of the minerals. A number of QTLs with major and minor effects for those traits have been detected in wheat; introducing the most effective into breeding lines will increase grain zinc and iron concentrations. New approaches to achieve this include marker assisted selection and genomic selection. Faster breeding approaches need to be combined to simultaneously increase grain mineral content and yield in wheat breeding lines. 2022-11-08 2023-01-19T16:59:47Z 2023-01-19T16:59:47Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/127590 en Open Access application/pdf Frontiers Media Roy, C., Kumar, S., Ranjan, R. D., Kumhar, S. R., & Govindan, V. (2022). Genomic approaches for improving grain zinc and iron content in wheat. Frontiers in Genetics, 13. https://doi.org/10.3389/fgene.2022.1045955
spellingShingle biofortification
marker-assisted selection
malnutrition
breeding
quantitative trait loci mapping
speed breeding
zinc
iron
wheat
Roy, Chandan
Kumar, Sudhir
Ranjan, Rakesh Deo
Kumhar, Sita Ram
Govindan, Velu
Genomic approaches for improving grain zinc and iron content in wheat
title Genomic approaches for improving grain zinc and iron content in wheat
title_full Genomic approaches for improving grain zinc and iron content in wheat
title_fullStr Genomic approaches for improving grain zinc and iron content in wheat
title_full_unstemmed Genomic approaches for improving grain zinc and iron content in wheat
title_short Genomic approaches for improving grain zinc and iron content in wheat
title_sort genomic approaches for improving grain zinc and iron content in wheat
topic biofortification
marker-assisted selection
malnutrition
breeding
quantitative trait loci mapping
speed breeding
zinc
iron
wheat
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/127590
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