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Journal ArticleDOI

An Update on Genetic Modification of Chickpea for Increased Yield and Stress Tolerance

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TLDR
An update on the development of genetically modified chickpea plants, including those resistant to Helicoverpa armigera, Callosobruchus maculatus, Aphis craccivora, as well as to drought and salt stress are provided.
Abstract
Chickpea is a highly nutritious grain legume crop, widely appreciated as a health food, especially in the Indian subcontinent. The major constraints on chickpea production are biotic (Helicoverpa, bruchid, aphid, ascochyta) and abiotic (drought, heat, salt, cold) stresses, which reduce the yield by up to 90%. Various strategies like conventional breeding, molecular breeding, and modern plant breeding have been used to overcome these problems. Conventionally, breeding programs aim at development of varieties that combine maximum number of traits through inter-specific hybridization, wide hybridization, and hybridization involving more than two parents. Breeding is difficult in this crop because of its self-pollinating nature and limited genetic variation. Recent advances in in vitro culture and gene technologies offer unique opportunities to realize the full potential of chickpea production. However, as of date, no transgenic chickpea variety has been approved for cultivation in the world. In this review, we provide an update on the development of genetically modified chickpea plants, including those resistant to Helicoverpa armigera, Callosobruchus maculatus, Aphis craccivora, as well as to drought and salt stress. The genes utilized for development of resistance against pod borer, bruchid, aphid, drought, and salt tolerance, namely, Bt, alpha amylase inhibitor, ASAL, P5CSF129A, and P5CS, respectively, are discussed.

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Conventional and Molecular Techniques from Simple Breeding to Speed Breeding in Crop Plants: Recent Advances and Future Outlook

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Metabolomics and Molecular Approaches Reveal Drought Stress Tolerance in Plants.

TL;DR: In this paper, a review summarizes the most updated findings on primary and secondary metabolites involved in drought stress and discuss possible strategies to help plants to counteract unfavorable drought periods, and examine the application of useful metabolic genes and their molecular responses to drought tolerance.
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Overexpression of a S-Adenosylmethionine Decarboxylase from Sugar Beet M14 Increased Araidopsis Salt Tolerance

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Journal ArticleDOI

Comparison of cultivated and wild chickpea genotypes for nutritional quality and antioxidant potential

TL;DR: Wild species had higher antioxidant potential as compared to cultivated genotypes due to higher free radical scavenging activity, ferric reducing antioxidant power and reducing power and Kabuli genotypes had lower antioxidant potential than desi genotype.
References
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Book

Responses of plants to environmental stresses

J. Levitt
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the responses of plants to environmental stresses and found that plants respond to environmental stress in response to various types of stressors, such as drought and flooding.
Journal ArticleDOI

Plant pathogens and integrated defence responses to infection.

TL;DR: The current knowledge of recognition-dependent disease resistance in plants is reviewed, and a few crucial concepts are included to compare and contrast plant innate immunity with that more commonly associated with animals.
Posted ContentDOI

World agriculture towards 2030/2050: the 2012 revision

TL;DR: In this paper, a re-make of the Interim Report World Agriculture: towards 2030/2050 (FAO, 2006) is presented, which includes a Chapter 4 on production factors (land, water, yields, fertilizers).
Journal ArticleDOI

Marker-assisted selection: an approach for precision plant breeding in the twenty-first century

TL;DR: An overview of the advantages of MAS and its most widely used applications in plant breeding, providing examples from cereal crops and ways in which the potential of MAS can be realized are suggested.
Journal ArticleDOI

Protease Inhibitors in Plants: Genes for Improving Defenses Against Insects and Pathogens

TL;DR: The inducible chemicals, which can also occur constitutively, include such complex sub­ stances as antibiotics, alkaloids, and terpenes, as well as proteins such as enzymes, enzyme inhibitors, and lectins, which have provided interesting systems for studying inducibles plant defense.
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