RECBREED (227190)

  https://cordis.europa.eu/project/id/227190

  FP7 (2007-2013)

  Recombination: an old and new tool for plant breeding

  Development of new tools and processes based upon genomic resources to support R&D in crop plants for breeding (KBBE-2008-1-1-01)

  DNA  ·  plant breeding  ·  heredity  ·  chromosomes  ·  genomes

  2009-03-01 Start Date (YY-MM-DD)

  2013-02-28 End Date (YY-MM-DD)

  € 4,174,447 Total Cost


  Description

Successful and efficient plant breeding depends on rapid recombination of advantageous traits to form new crop varieties. In recent years new breeding techniques have been introduced which rely on transgenic alteration of somatic cells and regeneration into plants with novel properties. The precision and effectiveness of both strategies rely upon homologous recombination (HR). The objective of this proposal is to provide plant breeders with new tools allowing better control over HR in both somatic and meiotic cells. The expected outcomes of the proposed research are efficient gene targeting (GT) technologies for precise engineering of plant genomes and control of rates of meiotic recombination between homologous or homeologous chromosomes in classical breeding. The major components of the HR machinery are common to somatic and meiotic cells, enabling us to address both processes in a synergistic way. HR can be divided into different steps: initiation by formation of a DNA double-strand break (DSB); recognition and invasion of an homologous DNA sequence; resolution of recombination structures. Each stage contains a bottleneck for both GT and meiotic HR that we will address. Work package 1 (WP1) aims at enhancing HR through targeted DSB induction. DSBs will be induced by Zinc-finger nucleases that can be custom-designed for target sequences anywhere in the genome. In WP2, we will test the influence of HR factors affecting homologue invasion and heteroduplex formation, such as RAD51 and its paralogues, the RAD52 homologue, genes that affect cytosine methylation in DNA, and mismatch repair. In WP3 we will concentrate on proteins involved in resolution and crossing-over. WP4 will test combinations of those approaches found in the first three WPs to build optimal strategies for application. Most experiments will be performed in the model plant Arabidopsis and implemented into crops such as tomato and maize to guarantee quick applicability for breeding.


  Complicit Organisations

2 Israeli organisations participate in RECBREED.

Country Organisation (ID) VAT Number Role Activity Type Total Cost EC Contribution Net EC Contribution
Netherlands UNIVERSITEIT LEIDEN (999974553) NL809778282B01 participant HES € 0 € 400,302 € 0
Switzerland UNIVERSITE DE GENEVE (999974650) CHE114927636TVA participant HES € 0 € 396,708 € 0
Israel WEIZMANN INSTITUTE OF SCIENCE (999979306) IL520016858 participant HES € 0 € 405,220 € 0
France BIOGEMMA (999515452) nan participant PRC € 0 € 369,500 € 0
Israel OSM-DAN LTD (999748737) IL513472589 participant PRC € 0 € 180,480 € 0
Netherlands KEYGENE NV (999432323) NL009527990B01 participant PRC € 0 € 389,308 € 0
Germany KARLSRUHER INSTITUT FUER TECHNOLOGIE (990797674) DE266749428 coordinator HES € 0 € 451,460 € 0
France CENTRE NATIONAL DE LA RECHERCHE SCIENTIFIQUE CNRS (999997930) FR40180089013 participant REC € 0 € 404,169 € 0