crop-genetic-engineering
Crop genetic engineering involves the deliberate modification of plant genomes using molecular tools to introduce, alter, or silence specific genes in agriculturally important species. This field is central to plant science because it enables researchers to study gene function in vivo and develop varieties with enhanced traits such as disease resistance, drought tolerance, improved nutritional profiles, and higher yields. By bridging fundamental plant biology with applied breeding, genetic engineering accelerates the development of crops adapted to changing environmental and food security challenges.
Nitrogen-Fixing Cereals: Engineering nif Gene Clusters in Wheat Mit...
It points toward a future where staple crops like wheat need less synthetic fertilizer — meaning ...
A distorter-restorer system drives quantitative reproductive isolat...
Disabling a single gene could allow breeders to cross wild rice relatives with cultivated rice, p...
CRISPR-Mediated Enhancement of Photosynthetic Efficiency in Oryza sativa
More efficient rice plants could mean higher food production on the same farmland — helping feed ...
CRISPR Base Editing Creates Herbicide-Tolerant Rice Without Transge...
It could lead to herbicide-tolerant rice and other crops that regulators classify as non-GMO, pot...
Multiplex gene editing drives revolution in crop breeding: overlaid...
Vegetables, grains, and fruits you eat could soon be bred to withstand droughts, produce more foo...
Challenges in Bringing Pangenome Research Into Breeding: A Case Stu...
Rice feeds more than half the world's population, and these new genetic tools could help breeders...