article

WheatCloseup

Breeding with ‘wild relatives’ to produce disease and climate resistant wheat

Thursday, 21 July 2022

New research has shown how introducing genetics from wild varieties of wheat can improve their resistance to disease and climate change, a discovery that could help protect the future of this vital food source.

Scientists from the University of Nottingham in collaboration with the John Innes Institute have transferred genetic variability into wheat from its wild relatives to enable resistance to a major disease of wheat, fusarium head blight (FHB) and to breed new wheat varieties that are high yielding but also adapted to climate change. Their findings have been published in two papers in Frontiers in Plant Science.

Fusarium head blight is a highly damaging disease of both bread wheat and durum wheat in many parts of the world. The disease is caused by several species of Fusarium fungus. The fungus can severely reduce yield but also produces mycotoxins that contaminate grain and pose a risk to human health. A worldwide study of crop pests and pathogens in 2019 estimated a 21.5% global yield loss for wheat with FHB as the second most damaging disease.

The researchers have revealed variability for characters which come from a wild relative called Triticum timopheevii that is resistant to FHB. As there is very little variability for resistance to this disease in wheat itself, this resistance from a wild relative has a critical role to play in future global wheat production.

The Nottingham team have developed new strategies to transfer genes from wild varieties that mimick the normal processes of reproduction that occur in nature. Using these methods they have generated thousands of plants with genetic variability and also developed large numbers of diagnostic genetic markers that tag the genetic variability from the wild relatives.

 

The ultimate goal of our team, the only major group outside China, is to make the genetic variability of the wild relatives of wheat available to everyone. We distribute all the material we develop, together with the marker information, around the world so that it can be exploited in breeding programmes globally.
Professor Julie King, Research Director of the programme at Nottingham

Hans Braun, who led research (2006-2020) at the world’s leading centre for wheat research and breeding, said: “With the exception of the dwarfing genes used by Norman Borlaug, that were the basis of the green revolution that saved a billion people from starvation, genetic variability from the wild relatives has probably had the greatest impact on wheat production. This is remarkable considering that only a tiny fraction of the variability for traits from the wild relatives has so far been exploited”.

The wheat/wild relative programme was funded jointly by The University of Nottingham and the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council.

Research papers in Frontiers in Plant Sciences can be viewed in full below:

Identification of Fusarium head blight resistance in Triticum timopheevii accessions and characterization of wheat-T. timopheevii introgression lines for enhanced resistance.  

Introgression of the Triticum timopheeviiGenome Into Wheat Detected by Chromosome-Specific Kompetitive Allele Specific PCR Markers

Story credits

More information is available from Professor Ian King or Professor Julie King on Ian.King@nottingham.ac.uk or Julie.king@nottingham.ac.uk 

janeicke
Jane Icke - Media Relations Manager Science
Email: jane.icke@nottingham.ac.uk
Phone: 0115 7486462
Location:

Notes to editors:

About the University of Nottingham

Ranked 32 in Europe and 16th in the UK by the QS World University Rankings: Europe 2024, the University of Nottingham is a founding member of the Russell Group of research-intensive universities. Studying at the University of Nottingham is a life-changing experience, and we pride ourselves on unlocking the potential of our students. We have a pioneering spirit, expressed in the vision of our founder Sir Jesse Boot, which has seen us lead the way in establishing campuses in China and Malaysia - part of a globally connected network of education, research and industrial engagement.

Nottingham was crowned Sports University of the Year by The Times and Sunday Times Good University Guide 2024 – the third time it has been given the honour since 2018 – and by the Daily Mail University Guide 2024.

The university is among the best universities in the UK for the strength of our research, positioned seventh for research power in the UK according to REF 2021. The birthplace of discoveries such as MRI and ibuprofen, our innovations transform lives and tackle global problems such as sustainable food supplies, ending modern slavery, developing greener transport, and reducing reliance on fossil fuels.

The university is a major employer and industry partner - locally and globally - and our graduates are the second most targeted by the UK's top employers, according to The Graduate Market in 2022 report by High Fliers Research.

We lead the Universities for Nottingham initiative, in partnership with Nottingham Trent University, a pioneering collaboration between the city’s two world-class institutions to improve levels of prosperity, opportunity, sustainability, health and wellbeing for residents in the city and region we are proud to call home.

More news…

Media Relations - External Relations

The University of Nottingham
YANG Fujia Building
Jubilee Campus
Wollaton Road
Nottingham, NG8 1BB

telephone: +44 (0) 115 951 5798
email: pressoffice@nottingham.ac.uk