Genetics and Multi-Omics for Crop Breeding
A special issue of International Journal of Molecular Sciences (ISSN 1422-0067). This special issue belongs to the section "Molecular Plant Sciences".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: 20 February 2025 | Viewed by 14913
Special Issue Editor
2. All-Russian Research Institute of Agricultural Biotechnology, Timiryazevskay 42 Str., 127550 Moscow, Russia
Interests: plant molecular cytogenetics; recombination; genomics; genome editing
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Plant products such as bread, oil, vegetables and fruits are present in our everyday diet. Ornamental plants make our life more colorful and bring us a sense of beauty. All the abundance and diversity of plant products we have today thanks, in particular, to plant breeding. Plant breeding is an ancient human activity that has come a long way in the evolution from primitive selection, further based on genetics through molecular selection (MAS) to multi-omics approaches. The rapid progress in genome sequencing and handling very large datasets have opened boundless prospects in genome study and gene manipulations. In silico analysis allows prediction of promotor region, regulator elements and coding regions of genes in non-sequenced crops based on sequenced species. Molecular cytogenetics bridges the gap between in silico genome analysis and in vivo organization. With NGS technologies, the genomic sequences of many important crops are available, facilitating genome editing approaches to create new allelic variants in the genomes of cultivated individuals. Over the past decades we unravel how mitochondria are involved in triggering death of the male reproductive organs. Cytoplasmic mail sterility (CMS) is successfully used in plant breeding, so the study of genotype polymorphisms in the mitochondrial DNAs across commercially used sources of CMS and discover of new CMS system are of great importance for both basic and applied research.
This Special Issue welcomes high-quality research articles and reviews that advance our knowledge of plant molecular biology and demonstrate the power of multi-omics approaches in crop breeding. Topics covered by this issue include but are not limited to:
- Multi-omics analysis pipelines as a breeding tool;
- CMS;
- Genome editing;
- Molecular cytogenetics in plant breeding.
Prof. Dr. Ludmila Khrustaleva
Guest Editor
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