Login / Signup

Systems models, phenomics and genomics: three pillars for developing high-yielding photosynthetically efficient crops.

Tian-Gen ChangShuoqi ChangQing-Feng SongShahnaz PerveenXin-Guang Zhu
Published in: In silico plants (2019)
Recent years witnessed a stagnation in yield enhancement in major staple crops, which leads plant biologists and breeders to focus on an urgent challenge to dramatically increase crop yield to meet the growing food demand. Systems models have started to show their capacity in guiding crops improvement for greater biomass and grain yield production. Here we argue that systems models, phenomics and genomics combined are three pillars for the future breeding for high-yielding photosynthetically efficient crops (HYPEC). Briefly, systems models can be used to guide identification of breeding targets for a particular cultivar and define optimal physiological and architectural parameters for a particular crop to achieve high yield under defined environments. Phenomics can support collection of architectural, physiological, biochemical and molecular parameters in a high-throughput manner, which can be used to support both model validation and model parameterization. Genomic techniques can be used to accelerate crop breeding by enabling more efficient mapping between genotypic and phenotypic variation, and guide genome engineering or editing for model-designed traits. In this paper, we elaborate on these roles and how they can work synergistically to support future HYPEC breeding.
Keyphrases
  • climate change
  • high throughput
  • single cell
  • current status
  • high resolution
  • genome wide
  • mass spectrometry