Raising crop yields: The missing links from molecular biology to plant breeding

Rapid advances in molecular biology and functional genomics during the last two decades have created considerable optimism about their potential to increase global food production by raising the yields of major agricultural crops via breeding of new crop varieties. However, yield increases achieved...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: W.A.J.M. De Costa
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Faculty of Science, University of Peradeniya, Sri Lanka 2018-09-01
Series:Ceylon Journal of Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://cjs.sljol.info/articles/7528
_version_ 1811325067180638208
author W.A.J.M. De Costa
author_facet W.A.J.M. De Costa
author_sort W.A.J.M. De Costa
collection DOAJ
description Rapid advances in molecular biology and functional genomics during the last two decades have created considerable optimism about their potential to increase global food production by raising the yields of major agricultural crops via breeding of new crop varieties. However, yield increases achieved so far have come largely through conventional plant breeding. This brief review outlines reasons why genetic transformations at the sub-cellular level in single plants grown in controlled environments may not necessarily translate in to yield increases of plant populations in the field. Expected advantages of sub-cellular molecular interventions are either dampened or reversed at the plant population level when crop yields are determined. This could happen due to complex interactions, feedbacks and trade-offs across different levels of plant organization at both spatial- and temporal scales, dependence on specific environmental requirements for expression of introduced genes, unrealistic experimental conditions used to generate trascriptomes and mis-matches between strategies required to achieve superior performance in single plants and plant populations. It is argued that an understanding of the physiological basis of yield determination at the plant population/community level, a tight linkage of genetic modifications to specific yield components and a thorough evaluation of feedbacks and trade-offs during up-scaling across different levels of plant organization is needed to harness the undoubted potential of molecular genetics towards crop yield improvement.
first_indexed 2024-04-13T14:26:30Z
format Article
id doaj.art-982de40881ab4dfebdc793ec8c56520a
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2513-2814
2513-230X
language English
last_indexed 2024-04-13T14:26:30Z
publishDate 2018-09-01
publisher Faculty of Science, University of Peradeniya, Sri Lanka
record_format Article
series Ceylon Journal of Science
spelling doaj.art-982de40881ab4dfebdc793ec8c56520a2022-12-22T02:43:19ZengFaculty of Science, University of Peradeniya, Sri LankaCeylon Journal of Science2513-28142513-230X2018-09-0147321322010.4038/cjs.v47i3.75285710Raising crop yields: The missing links from molecular biology to plant breedingW.A.J.M. De Costa0University of PeradeniyaRapid advances in molecular biology and functional genomics during the last two decades have created considerable optimism about their potential to increase global food production by raising the yields of major agricultural crops via breeding of new crop varieties. However, yield increases achieved so far have come largely through conventional plant breeding. This brief review outlines reasons why genetic transformations at the sub-cellular level in single plants grown in controlled environments may not necessarily translate in to yield increases of plant populations in the field. Expected advantages of sub-cellular molecular interventions are either dampened or reversed at the plant population level when crop yields are determined. This could happen due to complex interactions, feedbacks and trade-offs across different levels of plant organization at both spatial- and temporal scales, dependence on specific environmental requirements for expression of introduced genes, unrealistic experimental conditions used to generate trascriptomes and mis-matches between strategies required to achieve superior performance in single plants and plant populations. It is argued that an understanding of the physiological basis of yield determination at the plant population/community level, a tight linkage of genetic modifications to specific yield components and a thorough evaluation of feedbacks and trade-offs during up-scaling across different levels of plant organization is needed to harness the undoubted potential of molecular genetics towards crop yield improvement.https://cjs.sljol.info/articles/7528crop yield improvement, genetic transformation, molecular biology, physiological basis of yield determination
spellingShingle W.A.J.M. De Costa
Raising crop yields: The missing links from molecular biology to plant breeding
Ceylon Journal of Science
crop yield improvement, genetic transformation, molecular biology, physiological basis of yield determination
title Raising crop yields: The missing links from molecular biology to plant breeding
title_full Raising crop yields: The missing links from molecular biology to plant breeding
title_fullStr Raising crop yields: The missing links from molecular biology to plant breeding
title_full_unstemmed Raising crop yields: The missing links from molecular biology to plant breeding
title_short Raising crop yields: The missing links from molecular biology to plant breeding
title_sort raising crop yields the missing links from molecular biology to plant breeding
topic crop yield improvement, genetic transformation, molecular biology, physiological basis of yield determination
url https://cjs.sljol.info/articles/7528
work_keys_str_mv AT wajmdecosta raisingcropyieldsthemissinglinksfrommolecularbiologytoplantbreeding