OMICs, Epigenetics, and Genome Editing Techniques for Food and Nutritional Security.
|
IF: 0
|
Cited by: 11
|

Abstract

The incredible success of crop breeding and agricultural innovation in the last century greatly contributed to the Green Revolution, which significantly increased yields and ensures food security, despite the population explosion. However, new challenges such as rapid climate change, deteriorating soil, and the accumulation of pollutants require much faster responses and more effective solutions that cannot be achieved through traditional breeding. Further prospects for increasing the efficiency of agriculture are undoubtedly associated with the inclusion in the breeding strategy of new knowledge obtained using high-throughput technologies and new tools in the future to ensure the design of new plant genomes and predict the desired phenotype. This article provides an overview of the current state of research in these areas, as well as the study of soil and plant microbiomes, and the prospective use of their potential in a new field of microbiome engineering. In terms of genomic and phenomic predictions, we also propose an integrated approach that combines high-density genotyping and high-throughput phenotyping techniques, which can improve the prediction accuracy of quantitative traits in crop species.

Keywords

osmFISH
FISSEQ
STARmap
BaristaSeq
HDST
smFISH
Omics
RNAscope
LCM-seq
ProximID
ISS
Slide-seq
Tomo-seq
GEO-seq
DNA Microscopy
APEX-Seq
seqFISH+
MERFISH
Spatial Transcriptomics
DBiT-seq
NICHE-seq
GeoMx DSP
TIVA
epigenetics
epigenomics
genome sequencing
genomic prediction
plant microbiome
site-directed mutagenesis
transcriptome

Authors

Gogolev, Yuri V
Ahmar, Sunny
Akpinar, Bala Ani
Budak, Hikmet
Kiryushkin, Alexey S
Gorshkov, Vladimir Y
Hensel, Goetz
Demchenko, Kirill N
Kovalchuk, Igor
Mora-Poblete, Freddy
Muslu, Tugdem
Tsers, Ivan D
Yadav, Narendra Singh
Korzun, Viktor

Recommend literature





Similar data