United Kingdom
April 11, 2008
Source:
CropBiotech Update
The majority of cultivated rice
can be grouped into two major subspecies: indica and japonica.
Recent studies showed that the two rice subspecies evolved from
two independent domestication events of the Asian cultivated
rice. Japonica rice can grow in both temperate and tropical
regions unlike the indica subspecies. The genetic diversity of
the japonica subspecies, however, is narrower compared to indica
rice. In order to develop high yielding and stress tolerant
varieties, the japonica rice germplasm must be diversified. A
review paper published by the journal Molecular Breeding
discusses recent genomic approaches to assist breeding in the
japonica subspecies.
Researchers can locate useful genes in indica as well as wild
rice relatives using the full sequence of the rice genome and
the available tools offered by genomics. Such tools include
EcoTILLING, a high-throughput procedure of screening mutants for
sequence differences in known genes, and microarray-based
genotyping. Useful genes can be incorporated to commercial
japonica varieties through
marker-assisted breeding. The author suggests that
breeding strategies successfully employed in indica rice
breeding, such as idiotype breeding and wide hybridization,
might also be applied in japonica rice improvement.
The abstract of the paper, including links to the full article,
is available at
http://www.springerlink.com/content/h70810v82521552j/?p=ae31797184e847199e890c0a15b94189&pi=4
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