Zareen Sarfraz, Yusra Zarlashat, Alia Ambreen, Muhammad Mujahid, Muhammad Shahid Iqbal
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Advanced gene editing techniques for enhancing disease resistance and climate resilience in crops.
Ensuring food security and solving the issues brought on by climate change require breeding and engineering of climate-resilient crops. Despite its contributions to reducing agricultural diseases, genetic engineering has several limitations, including high labor costs, lengthy processing times, and poor productivity. Genome editing has become a potential method to provide notable opportunities to explain complex biological processes, genetically solve the causes of diseases, and improve crops for disease resistance by effectively modifying multiple traits. Genome editing techniques including TALENs, ZFNs, and CRISPR/Cas9 increase agricultural productivity by developing climate-resistant crops and promoting climate-resilient agriculture. Among these approaches, CRISPR/Cas9 shows exceptional efficacy, minimal chance of off-target effects, and improved traits such as drought tolerance and disease resistance. This study explores advanced gene editing techniques for improving disease resistance in crops and developing climate-resilient varieties to reduce food insecurity and hunger. It demonstrates that these techniques have enhanced the nutritional content and resilience of many crops by fighting abiotic and biotic stresses. Future agricultural practices could alter the genes and improve disease-resistant crops by genome editing techniques.
期刊介绍:
Functional Plant Biology (formerly known as Australian Journal of Plant Physiology) publishes papers of a broad interest that advance our knowledge on mechanisms by which plants operate and interact with environment. Of specific interest are mechanisms and signal transduction pathways by which plants adapt to extreme environmental conditions such as high and low temperatures, drought, flooding, salinity, pathogens, and other major abiotic and biotic stress factors. FPB also encourages papers on emerging concepts and new tools in plant biology, and studies on the following functional areas encompassing work from the molecular through whole plant to community scale. FPB does not publish merely phenomenological observations or findings of merely applied significance.
Functional Plant Biology is published with the endorsement of the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) and the Australian Academy of Science.
Functional Plant Biology is published in affiliation with the Federation of European Societies of Plant Biology and in Australia, is associated with the Australian Society of Plant Scientists and the New Zealand Society of Plant Biologists.