Plant Genebanks Present situation and proposals for their improvement. The case of the Spanish Network

Genebanks were created by the middle of the twentieth century to preserve cultivated biodiversity when landraces began to be substituted by modern varieties. This move was generally accepted as a necessary step to safeguard the future. After about 75 years of collecting and maintaining genetic resources, the increasing ability of biotechnology to create new variability brings the roles of genebanks in the present and near future into question. As a continuation of several workshops that started in 2014, staff of some representative genebanks have met to discuss how the Spanish Plant Genetic Resources Network can be improved, identifying the following major shortcomings: lack of efficient coordination in the distribution of species among genebanks; too many genebanks; existence of detected and undetected duplicates; insufficient rate of regeneration; insufficient phenotyping, genotyping, and epiphenotyping; unsatisfactory rate of use by end users; and, insufficient funding. As a considerable increase in public funding is unlikely, we propose some strategies to increase the efficiency of the system. The most urgent tasks are to strengthen the rationalization of the network by establishing a clear hierarchy and functions, to improve the information in the base collection by deep characterization including not only phenotypes but also uses and utilities, to progressively replace the active collections with focused core collections constructed to meet users’ needs, to optimize regeneration protocols, to limit new collecting expeditions of Spanish crop wild relatives to those growing in threatened habitats, and to develop user-friendly platforms to access germplasm documentation, including a unified system of descriptors and classification categories. Current advances in biotechnology, and especially those in gene editing will have without doubt an impact on the role of genebanks. However, the high number of genes and gene combinations created by evolution they hold cannot be produced by these techniques at present. So, these reservoirs of variability will continue to be indispensable for the near-medium future while the function of all the genes is unveiled. In turn, biotechnologies and gene editing will allow us to take advantage of the information held in genebanks in a more efficient and fast way, contributing to a better rationalization and functioning.

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Main Author: Díez, María José and De la Rosa, Lucía and Martín, Isaura and Guasch, Luís and Cartea, María Elena and Mallor, Cristina and Casals, Joan and Simó, Joan and Rivera, Ana and Anastasio, German and Prohens, Jaime and Soler, Salvador and Blanca, José and Valcárcel, José Vicente and Casañas, Francesc
Format: artículo biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media 2018
Subjects:Genetic variability, Phenotypic variation, Ex situ conservation, Landraces, Crop wild relatives, Seedbanks, Gene conservation, Plant genetic resources,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12792/948
http://hdl.handle.net/10261/290520
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spelling dig-inia-es-10261-2905202023-02-17T12:26:33Z Plant Genebanks Present situation and proposals for their improvement. The case of the Spanish Network Díez, María José and De la Rosa, Lucía and Martín, Isaura and Guasch, Luís and Cartea, María Elena and Mallor, Cristina and Casals, Joan and Simó, Joan and Rivera, Ana and Anastasio, German and Prohens, Jaime and Soler, Salvador and Blanca, José and Valcárcel, José Vicente and Casañas, Francesc Genetic variability Phenotypic variation Ex situ conservation Landraces Crop wild relatives Seedbanks Gene conservation Plant genetic resources Genebanks were created by the middle of the twentieth century to preserve cultivated biodiversity when landraces began to be substituted by modern varieties. This move was generally accepted as a necessary step to safeguard the future. After about 75 years of collecting and maintaining genetic resources, the increasing ability of biotechnology to create new variability brings the roles of genebanks in the present and near future into question. As a continuation of several workshops that started in 2014, staff of some representative genebanks have met to discuss how the Spanish Plant Genetic Resources Network can be improved, identifying the following major shortcomings: lack of efficient coordination in the distribution of species among genebanks; too many genebanks; existence of detected and undetected duplicates; insufficient rate of regeneration; insufficient phenotyping, genotyping, and epiphenotyping; unsatisfactory rate of use by end users; and, insufficient funding. As a considerable increase in public funding is unlikely, we propose some strategies to increase the efficiency of the system. The most urgent tasks are to strengthen the rationalization of the network by establishing a clear hierarchy and functions, to improve the information in the base collection by deep characterization including not only phenotypes but also uses and utilities, to progressively replace the active collections with focused core collections constructed to meet users’ needs, to optimize regeneration protocols, to limit new collecting expeditions of Spanish crop wild relatives to those growing in threatened habitats, and to develop user-friendly platforms to access germplasm documentation, including a unified system of descriptors and classification categories. Current advances in biotechnology, and especially those in gene editing will have without doubt an impact on the role of genebanks. However, the high number of genes and gene combinations created by evolution they hold cannot be produced by these techniques at present. So, these reservoirs of variability will continue to be indispensable for the near-medium future while the function of all the genes is unveiled. In turn, biotechnologies and gene editing will allow us to take advantage of the information held in genebanks in a more efficient and fast way, contributing to a better rationalization and functioning. 2023-02-17T12:26:33Z 2023-02-17T12:26:33Z 2018 artículo Frontiers in Plant Science 9: e1794 (2018)  http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12792/948 http://hdl.handle.net/10261/290520 10.3389/fpls.2018.01794 1664-462X en open Frontiers Media
institution INIA ES
collection DSpace
country España
countrycode ES
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-inia-es
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Sur
libraryname Biblioteca del INIA España
language English
topic Genetic variability
Phenotypic variation
Ex situ conservation
Landraces
Crop wild relatives
Seedbanks
Gene conservation
Plant genetic resources
Genetic variability
Phenotypic variation
Ex situ conservation
Landraces
Crop wild relatives
Seedbanks
Gene conservation
Plant genetic resources
spellingShingle Genetic variability
Phenotypic variation
Ex situ conservation
Landraces
Crop wild relatives
Seedbanks
Gene conservation
Plant genetic resources
Genetic variability
Phenotypic variation
Ex situ conservation
Landraces
Crop wild relatives
Seedbanks
Gene conservation
Plant genetic resources
Díez, María José and De la Rosa, Lucía and Martín, Isaura and Guasch, Luís and Cartea, María Elena and Mallor, Cristina and Casals, Joan and Simó, Joan and Rivera, Ana and Anastasio, German and Prohens, Jaime and Soler, Salvador and Blanca, José and Valcárcel, José Vicente and Casañas, Francesc
Plant Genebanks Present situation and proposals for their improvement. The case of the Spanish Network
description Genebanks were created by the middle of the twentieth century to preserve cultivated biodiversity when landraces began to be substituted by modern varieties. This move was generally accepted as a necessary step to safeguard the future. After about 75 years of collecting and maintaining genetic resources, the increasing ability of biotechnology to create new variability brings the roles of genebanks in the present and near future into question. As a continuation of several workshops that started in 2014, staff of some representative genebanks have met to discuss how the Spanish Plant Genetic Resources Network can be improved, identifying the following major shortcomings: lack of efficient coordination in the distribution of species among genebanks; too many genebanks; existence of detected and undetected duplicates; insufficient rate of regeneration; insufficient phenotyping, genotyping, and epiphenotyping; unsatisfactory rate of use by end users; and, insufficient funding. As a considerable increase in public funding is unlikely, we propose some strategies to increase the efficiency of the system. The most urgent tasks are to strengthen the rationalization of the network by establishing a clear hierarchy and functions, to improve the information in the base collection by deep characterization including not only phenotypes but also uses and utilities, to progressively replace the active collections with focused core collections constructed to meet users’ needs, to optimize regeneration protocols, to limit new collecting expeditions of Spanish crop wild relatives to those growing in threatened habitats, and to develop user-friendly platforms to access germplasm documentation, including a unified system of descriptors and classification categories. Current advances in biotechnology, and especially those in gene editing will have without doubt an impact on the role of genebanks. However, the high number of genes and gene combinations created by evolution they hold cannot be produced by these techniques at present. So, these reservoirs of variability will continue to be indispensable for the near-medium future while the function of all the genes is unveiled. In turn, biotechnologies and gene editing will allow us to take advantage of the information held in genebanks in a more efficient and fast way, contributing to a better rationalization and functioning.
format artículo
topic_facet Genetic variability
Phenotypic variation
Ex situ conservation
Landraces
Crop wild relatives
Seedbanks
Gene conservation
Plant genetic resources
author Díez, María José and De la Rosa, Lucía and Martín, Isaura and Guasch, Luís and Cartea, María Elena and Mallor, Cristina and Casals, Joan and Simó, Joan and Rivera, Ana and Anastasio, German and Prohens, Jaime and Soler, Salvador and Blanca, José and Valcárcel, José Vicente and Casañas, Francesc
author_facet Díez, María José and De la Rosa, Lucía and Martín, Isaura and Guasch, Luís and Cartea, María Elena and Mallor, Cristina and Casals, Joan and Simó, Joan and Rivera, Ana and Anastasio, German and Prohens, Jaime and Soler, Salvador and Blanca, José and Valcárcel, José Vicente and Casañas, Francesc
author_sort Díez, María José and De la Rosa, Lucía and Martín, Isaura and Guasch, Luís and Cartea, María Elena and Mallor, Cristina and Casals, Joan and Simó, Joan and Rivera, Ana and Anastasio, German and Prohens, Jaime and Soler, Salvador and Blanca, José and Valcárcel, José Vicente and Casañas, Francesc
title Plant Genebanks Present situation and proposals for their improvement. The case of the Spanish Network
title_short Plant Genebanks Present situation and proposals for their improvement. The case of the Spanish Network
title_full Plant Genebanks Present situation and proposals for their improvement. The case of the Spanish Network
title_fullStr Plant Genebanks Present situation and proposals for their improvement. The case of the Spanish Network
title_full_unstemmed Plant Genebanks Present situation and proposals for their improvement. The case of the Spanish Network
title_sort plant genebanks present situation and proposals for their improvement. the case of the spanish network
publisher Frontiers Media
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12792/948
http://hdl.handle.net/10261/290520
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