Chromosome Manipulation for Plant Breeding Purposes

The ability to exploit the potential of wild relatives carrying beneficial traits is a major goal in breeding programs. However, it relies on the possibility of the chromosomes from the crop and wild species in interspecific crosses to recognize, associate, and undergo crossover formation during mei...

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Year of Publication:2021
Language:English
Physical Description:1 electronic resource (138 p.)
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id 993545574004498
ctrlnum (CKB)5400000000040812
(oapen)https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/68359
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collection bib_alma
record_format marc
spelling Prieto, Pilar edt
Chromosome Manipulation for Plant Breeding Purposes
Basel, Switzerland MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2021
1 electronic resource (138 p.)
text txt rdacontent
computer c rdamedia
online resource cr rdacarrier
The ability to exploit the potential of wild relatives carrying beneficial traits is a major goal in breeding programs. However, it relies on the possibility of the chromosomes from the crop and wild species in interspecific crosses to recognize, associate, and undergo crossover formation during meiosis, the cellular process responsible for producing gametes with half the genetic content of their parent cells. Unfortunately, in most cases, a barrier exists preventing successful hybridization between the wild and crop chromosomes. Understanding the mechanisms controlling chromosome associations during meiosis are of great interest in plant breeding and will allow chromosome manipulation to introduce genetic variability from related species into a crop. In addition to interspecific hybrids, other materials, such as natural and synthetic polyploids and introgression lines derived from allopolyploids, among others, are powerful tools in the framework of plant breeding. For example, an extra pair of alien chromosomes in the full genome complement of a crop species has been frequently used as a first step to access genetic variation from the secondary gene pool in breeding programs. In addition, such introgression lines are also pivotal in the study of interspecific genetic interactions, in the chromosomal location of genetic markers, and in the study of chromosome structure and behavior in somatic and meiotic cells. Contained in this Special Issue are accounts of original research, including new tools to identify chromosome introgressions and the development and characterization of introgression lines and interspecific hybrids carrying desirable agronomic traits for plant breeding purposes. Also included are reviews about the chromosome engineering of tropical cash crops and the effect of chromosome structure on chromosome associations and recombination during meiosis to allow chromosome manipulation in the framework of plant breeding.
English
Research & information: general bicssc
Biology, life sciences bicssc
fluorescence in situ hybridization
mini-satellite
tandem repeats
wheat
starch
tritordeum
waxy proteins
wheat quality
wild barley
grain colour
Hordeum chilense
wheat introgression
rye
5R dissection line
PCR-based markers
physical map
stripe rust
chromosome rearrangements
meiotic recombination
crossover distribution
Triticeae
barley
anatomy
citrus
flow cytometry
histogenic layer
polyploidy breeding
Aegilops
centric breaks
chromosome fusion
Robertsonian translocations
telosomic chromosomes
triticale
wheat bread-making gene
introgression
PCR markers
tropical cash crops
coffee
cacao
papaya
chromosome engineering
synthetic biology
meiosis
chromosome pairing
non-homologous recombination
cytogenetics
alien chromosome
polyploidy
aneuploidy
3-0365-0024-3
3-0365-0025-1
Prieto, Pilar oth
language English
format eBook
author2 Prieto, Pilar
author_facet Prieto, Pilar
author2_variant p p pp
author2_role Sonstige
title Chromosome Manipulation for Plant Breeding Purposes
spellingShingle Chromosome Manipulation for Plant Breeding Purposes
title_full Chromosome Manipulation for Plant Breeding Purposes
title_fullStr Chromosome Manipulation for Plant Breeding Purposes
title_full_unstemmed Chromosome Manipulation for Plant Breeding Purposes
title_auth Chromosome Manipulation for Plant Breeding Purposes
title_new Chromosome Manipulation for Plant Breeding Purposes
title_sort chromosome manipulation for plant breeding purposes
publisher MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
publishDate 2021
physical 1 electronic resource (138 p.)
isbn 3-0365-0024-3
3-0365-0025-1
illustrated Not Illustrated
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is_hierarchy_title Chromosome Manipulation for Plant Breeding Purposes
author2_original_writing_str_mv noLinkedField
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