Anglin Noelle L, Wenzl Peter, Azevedo Vania, Lusty Charlotte, Ellis David, Gao Dongying
United States Department of Agriculture Agricultural Research Service Small Grains and Potato Germplasm Research, Aberdeen, ID 83210, USA.
Centro Internacional de Agricultura Tropical (CIAT), Km 17 Recta Cali-Palmira, Palmira 763537, Colombia.
Plants (Basel). 2025 Jan 17;14(2):252. doi: 10.3390/plants14020252.
The maintenance of plant germplasm and its genetic diversity is critical to preserving and making it available for food security, so this invaluable diversity is not permanently lost due to population growth and development, climate change, or changing needs from the growers and/or the marketplace. There are numerous genebanks worldwide that serve to preserve valuable plant germplasm for humankind's future and to serve as a resource for research, breeding, and training. The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) National Plant Germplasm System (NPGS) and the Consultative Group for International Agricultural Research (CGIAR) both have a network of plant germplasm collections scattered across varying geographical locations preserving genetic resources for the future. Besides the USDA and CGIAR, there are germplasm collections established in many countries across the world that also aim to preserve crop and plant collections. Due to the advancement of technology, genotyping and sequencing whole genomes of plant germplasm collections is now feasible. Data from genotyping can help define genetic diversity within a collection, identify genetic gaps, reveal genetic redundancies and verify uniqueness, enable the comparison of collections of the same crop across genebanks (rationalization), and determine errors or mix-ups in genetic identity that may have occurred in a germplasm collection. Large-scale projects, such as genotyping germplasm collections, require strategic planning and the development of best practices. This article details strategies and best practices to consider when genotyping whole collections, considerations for the identity verification of germplasm and determining genetic replicates, quality management systems (QMS)/QC genotyping, and some use cases.
植物种质及其遗传多样性的维护对于保障粮食安全并使其可获取至关重要,这样这种无比珍贵的多样性才不会因人口增长与发展、气候变化或种植者和/或市场需求的变化而永久丧失。全球有众多基因库致力于为人类未来保存珍贵的植物种质,并作为研究、育种和培训的资源。美国农业部(USDA)的国家植物种质系统(NPGS)和国际农业研究磋商组织(CGIAR)都有一个植物种质收集网络,这些收集点分布在不同地理位置,为未来保存遗传资源。除了美国农业部和国际农业研究磋商组织外,世界上许多国家也建立了种质收集库,其目的同样是保存作物和植物收集品。由于技术的进步,对植物种质收集品进行基因分型和全基因组测序现在已可行。基因分型数据有助于界定一个收集品内的遗传多样性、识别遗传缺口、揭示遗传冗余并验证独特性,能够比较不同基因库中同一作物的收集品(合理化),并确定种质收集品中可能出现的遗传身份错误或混淆。大规模项目,如对种质收集品进行基因分型,需要战略规划和最佳实践的制定。本文详细介绍了对整个收集品进行基因分型时应考虑的策略和最佳实践、种质身份验证和确定遗传重复品的注意事项、质量管理体系(QMS)/基因分型质量控制以及一些应用案例。