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Lost opportunities in crop plant science in Europe according to ESRC
Posted by: Prof. Dr. M. Raupp (IP Logged)
Date: December 09, 2005 07:39AM

www.checkbiotech.org ; www.raupp.info ; www.czu.cz

GMO has led to a neglect of broader genomics-based approaches for improving
crop plants, notably ?marker-assisted breeding, December 2005.

The current lack of investment in European crop science, which may be due
to Europe?s long-standing scepticism about genetically modified plants or
?GM?, has led to a neglect of broader genomics-based approaches for
improving crop plants, notably ?marker-assisted breeding?.These are the
conclusions Prof. Steve Hughes, co-director of the ESRC Centre for Genomics
in Society, draws in an opinion piece published in the Plant Biotechnology
Journal. Hughes responds to several recent reviews of crop plant science in
Europe that reveal a picture of resource deficit and missed opportunity."GM
may have swung people's attention away from genomics and crop plant science,
but marker-assisted breeding has the potential to be translated into real
crop improvement, both for the first and third worlds".

While long-standing skepticism about genetically modified crops or 'GM' in
Europe may be responsible for the slip of crop science from the priority
areas of the European Research Framework Programme, as well as for the
withdrawal of much industrial research in this area to the United States,
Hughes?instead of defending GM?insists on a distinction between GM and
genomics-based approaches for crop plant improvement, notably
marker-assisted breeding and selection.Instead of introducing a single gene
into a crop plant genome, the approach taken in GM, marker-assisted breeding
identifies genetic markers that are associated with favorable traits across
the genome. The application of these molecular markers allows to breed crops
with more robust disease resistance more rapidly.

Recent reports by the BBSRC, the European Academies Science Advisory Council
(EASAC), as well as the European Plant Science Organisation (EPSO) all
identify marker-assisted breeding as a key technology for crop
improvement.As crop plant breeding is not a high profit-margin business,
Hughes also recommends that more crop plant science should be carried out in
public-private partnerships and that the resources and enablements generated
should be shared among breeders. "Molecular markers for breeding can be
equally applicable to rich and poor people's crop plants, and research
funding bodies should make resource sharing a condition of support" he says.

Specifically, he also recommends that European funding agencies should
collaborate with programmes such as ?Unlocking Genetic Diversity in Crops
for the Resource-Poor', recently floated by the Consultative Group for
International Agricultural Research (CIGAR).

[www.foodingredientsfirst.com]

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