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Genomics Associated Interventions for Heat Stress Tolerance in Cool Season Adapted Grain Legumes

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms23010399

Keywords

climate change; high temperature; epigenetics; genome editing; nanoparticles; candidate genes; mRNA; signalling pathways

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Due to climate change, rising temperatures negatively affect cool season grain legumes. Traditional breeding approaches are no longer sufficient to meet global demands, and genomic interventions have played a crucial role in improving legume varieties.
Cool season grain legumes occupy an important place among the agricultural crops and essentially provide multiple benefits including food supply, nutrition security, soil fertility improvement and revenue for farmers all over the world. However, owing to climate change, the average temperature is steadily rising, which negatively affects crop performance and limits their yield. Terminal heat stress that mainly occurred during grain development phases severely harms grain quality and weight in legumes adapted to the cool season, such as lentils, faba beans, chickpeas, field peas, etc. Although, traditional breeding approaches with advanced screening procedures have been employed to identify heat tolerant legume cultivars. Unfortunately, traditional breeding pipelines alone are no longer enough to meet global demands. Genomics-assisted interventions including new-generation sequencing technologies and genotyping platforms have facilitated the development of high-resolution molecular maps, QTL/gene discovery and marker-assisted introgression, thereby improving the efficiency in legumes breeding to develop stress-resilient varieties. Based on the current scenario, we attempted to review the intervention of genomics to decipher different components of tolerance to heat stress and future possibilities of using newly developed genomics-based interventions in cool season adapted grain legumes.

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