Are GM Crops for Yield and Resilience Possible?

Crop yield improvements need to accelerate to avoid future food insecurity. Outside Europe, genetically modified (GM) crops for herbicide- and insect-resistance have been transformative in agriculture; other traits have also come to market. However, GM of yield potential and stress resilience has yet to impact on food security. Genes have been identified for yield such as grain number, size, leaf growth, resource allocation, and signaling for drought tolerance, but there is only one commercialized drought-tolerant GM variety. For GM and genome editing to impact on yield and resilience there is a need to understand yield-determining processes in a cell and developmental context combined with evaluation in the grower environment. We highlight a sugar signaling mechanism as a paradigm for this approach.

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Citation Report https://scite.ai/reports/10.1016/j.tplants.2017.09.007
DFW Organisation RRes
DFW Work Package 1
DOI 10.1016/j.tplants.2017.09.007
Date Last Updated 2019-07-18T07:04:26.583043
Evidence oa repository (via OAI-PMH title and first author match)
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PDF URL https://repository.rothamsted.ac.uk/download/76ed6e24f291715e8617abae747509dedd56733ad842129ce930c0b5bfa11d01/1098132/Paul%20et%20al%202018%20TIPS.pdf
Publisher URL https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tplants.2017.09.007