4.5 Article

Harnessing wild relatives of pearl millet for germplasm enhancement: Challenges and opportunities

Journal

CROP SCIENCE
Volume 61, Issue 1, Pages 177-200

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/csc2.20343

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Funding

  1. Government of Norway
  2. CGIAR Research Program on Grain Legumes and Dryland Cereals (GLDC)

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Pearl millet is a resilient warm-season cereal crop cultivated mainly in Asia and Africa for its gluten-free grains with high nutrients. To improve stress tolerance, breeders are searching for novel genes from diverse sources like crop wild relatives. This article discusses strategies for using alleles to enhance climate resilience traits and emphasizes the importance of using wild relatives for crop improvement.
Pearl millet [Pennisetum glaucum (L.) R. Br.] is one of the world's hardiest warm-season cereal crop and is cultivated mainly in the semi-arid tropics of Asia and Africa for food, feed, fodder, and brewing. It is mainly cultivated for its gluten-free grains with high content and better quality of nutrients. Pearl millet is a resilient crop that can produce grain and biomass under harsh conditions like low fertility, erratic rainfall, acidic and saline soils, and the hottest climates. However, biotic stresses such as downy mildew and blast diseases and abiotic stresses, especially drought and seedling- and flowering-stage heat stress, pose constant threat to the realization of yield potential of this crop. To make further improvement in threshold level of abiotic and biotic stress tolerance, breeders are looking for novel genes in diverse germplasm sources. Crop wild relatives (CWRs) could be a source of novel genes that are important for diversification of the genetic base of pearl millet. A stage-gate process is proposed for the efficient management of prebreeding programs using CWRs as a source of germplasm diversity and improvement. This article explains the various strategies for capturing and using alleles for climate resilience traits improvement. This article covers breeders' perspectives on importance of using CWRs as germplasm source for crop improvement. This article also describes the availability of CWRs, characterization of new traits and the strategies to be applied for the identification and introduction of genes of interest in elite breeding lines and commercial varieties and hybrids of pearl millet.

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