Satellite DNA-targeted CRISPR/Cas9-mediated editing enables chromosome truncation and elimination in wheat.
Chen J, Liu T, Xia Y, Barth L, Plieske J
Crispr
Wheat feeds roughly 35% of the world's population, and the ability to surgically remove problem chromosomes could accelerate breeding of disease-resistant, higher-yield, or climate-resilient wheat varieties far faster than traditional crossbreeding.
Wheat has a huge, complicated set of chromosomes — think of it as a very messy instruction manual. Scientists found a way to use molecular 'scissors' to cut specific repetitive sections of those chromosomes, causing the plant to shed entire unwanted chromosome arms or whole chromosomes. This is like being able to rip out whole chapters of that manual on purpose, which could help breeders create better wheat much more quickly.
Key Findings
CRISPR/Cas9 targeted at satellite DNA (highly repetitive chromosomal sequences) successfully induced chromosome truncation and whole-chromosome elimination in wheat
The technique exploits repetitive satellite sequences present across multiple chromosomes to trigger large-scale structural changes, demonstrating a scalable method for chromosome engineering
Chromosome elimination was heritable, meaning edited plants passed the modified chromosome complement to offspring — a critical requirement for practical breeding applications
chevron_right Technical Summary
Scientists used the gene-editing tool CRISPR to precisely cut repetitive DNA sequences on wheat chromosomes, causing those chromosomes to be truncated or completely removed from the plant. This gives researchers a powerful new way to engineer wheat's complex genome by eliminating unwanted chromosome segments.
Species Mentioned
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