Are we ready for back-to-nature crop breeding?

•Reverse breeding is here defined as introduction of ancestral traits into crops.•Reverse breeding provides a promising future path for sustainable agriculture.•Current legislations may define plants obtained by reverse breeding as GMOs. Sustainable agriculture in response to increasing demands for...

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Veröffentlicht in:Trends in plant science 2015-03, Vol.20 (3), p.155-164
Hauptverfasser: Palmgren, Michael G., Edenbrandt, Anna Kristina, Vedel, Suzanne Elizabeth, Andersen, Martin Marchman, Landes, Xavier, Østerberg, Jeppe Thulin, Falhof, Janus, Olsen, Lene Irene, Christensen, Søren Brøgger, Sandøe, Peter, Gamborg, Christian, Kappel, Klemens, Thorsen, Bo Jellesmark, Pagh, Peter
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Reverse breeding is here defined as introduction of ancestral traits into crops.•Reverse breeding provides a promising future path for sustainable agriculture.•Current legislations may define plants obtained by reverse breeding as GMOs. Sustainable agriculture in response to increasing demands for food depends on development of high-yielding crops with high nutritional value that require minimal intervention during growth. To date, the focus has been on changing plants by introducing genes that impart new properties, which the plants and their ancestors never possessed. By contrast, we suggest another potentially beneficial and perhaps less controversial strategy that modern plant biotechnology may adopt. This approach, which broadens earlier approaches to reverse breeding, aims to furnish crops with lost properties that their ancestors once possessed in order to tolerate adverse environmental conditions. What molecular techniques are available for implementing such rewilding? Are the strategies legally, socially, economically, and ethically feasible? These are the questions addressed in this review. [Display omitted]
ISSN:1360-1385
1878-4372
DOI:10.1016/j.tplants.2014.11.003