LONDON -- British scientists have decoded the genetic sequence
of wheat -- one of the world's oldest and most important crops
-- a development they hope could help breed better strains of
the global food staple.
Wheat is grown across more of the world's farmland than any
other cereal, and researchers said Friday they're posting its
genetic code on the Internet in the hope that farmers can use
it as a tool to help improve their crops.
University of Liverpool scientist Neil Hall said that the code
would serve as "the reference -- the starting point that
new technology and new science can be built upon."
He said that, for example, the information could help farmers
better identify genetic variations responsible for disease resistance,
drought tolerance and yield. Although the genetic sequence being
published Friday remains a rough draft, and additional strains
of wheat need to be analyzed for the work to be truly useful,
Hall predicted it wouldn't take long for his work to make an
impact in the field.
"Hopefully the benefit of this work will come through
in the next five years," he said.
Among the potential benefits: lower prices for bread and greater
food security for the world's poor.
Wheat is a relative latecomer to the world of DNA mapping.
This year marks the tenth anniversary of the date the human
genome was laid bare. Other crops have had their genetic codes
unscrambled within the past few years -- rice in 2005, corn
in 2009, and soybeans earlier this year.
The reason, Hall said, was that wheat's genetic code is massive
-- far larger than corn or rice and five times the length of
the one carried by humans. Strains such as the Chinese spring
wheat analyzed by Hall's team carry six copies of the same gene
(most creatures carry two.) Wheat in general has a tangled ancestry,
tracing its descent from three different species of wild grass.
But techniques have improved dramatically over the past decade,
and scientists were able to complete the sequence in about a
year.
The cracking of wheat's code comes at a time when prices have
zoomed up in the wake of crop failures in Russia. Concerns over
climate change, water shortages and population growth have loomed
in the background for years.
Wheat physiologist Matthew Reynolds, of the Mexico-based International
Maize and Wheat Improvement Center, said he hoped the sequence
would help create crops better able to meet those challenges.
"Such varieties are crucial to meet increased demand from
growing and more prosperous populations, confront the challenges
of climate change and looming scarcities of land, water, and
fertilizer, and avoid global food shortages and price spikes
that particularly harm the poor," he was quoted as saying
by the BBC.
But he told the broadcaster that improved crop management techniques
could be just as important as genetic advances.