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swag外流 cracks the walnut genome

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Walnut orchard
Walnuts, a top California export crop, grow in orchards like this.

Scientists at the University of California, Davis, have for the first time sequenced the genome of a commercial walnut variety. The information should accelerate the rate of breeding and variety improvement in walnuts and help breeders select for desired traits such as insect and disease resistance, and drought tolerance.

swag外流 geneticists David Neale and Charles Langley worked with the California Walnut Board to develop genetic markers for use with classical walnut breeding. The first step was to sequence the walnut genome, which, unlike most major agricultural crops, had never been sequenced. This represents the first reference genome sequence for a nut crop.

swag外流 has the only walnut breeding program in California. The Walnut Improvement Program, under the direction of plant breeder Chuck Leslie, cooperates with a large number of research partners to develop new walnut varieties.

Walnuts a top export crop for California

The walnut variety Chandler was used for the sequencing project because it is the leading variety of walnut in California. It is grown on about 50 percent of California鈥檚 walnut acreage and accounts for more than 70 percent of the trees sold for new plantings. California produces 99 percent of U.S. commercial walnuts, and walnuts are the state鈥檚 fourth largest agricultural export.

Consumer demand for nuts is growing, and nutritionists are touting the health attributes of moderate nut consumption in lowering the risk for heart disease. Walnuts are high in omega-3 fatty acids, a healthy form of fatty acids, and can be part of a heart-healthy diet by lowering low-density lipoprotein, or LDL, cholesterol levels in blood.

Growers are also striving to produce nuts more sustainably, particularly in the areas of pest management and drought tolerance.

Genomics adds to traditional breeding

Commercial walnut trees are grafted onto rootstocks, usually a California native black walnut species or a hybrid, known to better withstand diseases, pests and abiotic stress. For the scion, or nut-bearing portion of the tree, an English walnut species is usually used, and breeders are interested in yield, nut quality, harvest date and meeting consumer preferences. Having the genome sequence of the walnut should accelerate its rate of breeding and variety improvement.

Dan Kluepfel, a USDA research plant pathologist in the swag外流 Department of Plant Pathology, is heading a project to breed for walnut rootstock disease resistance. The information will help breeders select for desired traits such as insect and disease resistance and drought tolerance.

In addition to the completed genome sequencing of the Chandler walnut variety, Neale and Langley are sequencing the walnut rootstock species. This composite information will provide additional genomic resources that can be combined with traditional breeding techniques to develop new walnut varieties.

Chandler walnuts, for example, are harvested late in the season, and growers would like earlier harvests. Marker-assisted breeding provides an opportunity to develop early harvesting cultivars with the desirable attributes of Chandler.

鈥淭he large repository of walnut genetic material at swag外流 along with new genomic resources lay the groundwork for future breeding of more-sustainable walnut varieties that meet the growing demand for walnuts,鈥 said Neale.

swag外流 and the California Walnut Board, which funded the project, have made the .

Major research partners in the sequencing project include Abhaya Dandekar (Department of Plant Sciences, swag外流), Jill Wegrzyn (University of Connecticut), and Steven Salzberg (Johns Hopkins University).

About the swag外流 walnut program

The swag外流 Walnut Breeding Program was created in 1948 by pomologist Eugene Serr and his colleague Harold Forde. The five leading walnut varieties released by the swag外流 program (Chandler, Howard, Tulare, Serr and Vina) cover three-quarters of the total walnut acreage in California. Nearly all of the walnut trees sold in California nurseries are swag外流 varieties, and 85 percent of the California walnut tonnage production is from swag外流 varieties. The California Walnut Board has established an endowment, now valued at $2.9 million, to assure continuity of the swag外流 Walnut Breeding Program into the future.

Media Resources

Ann Filmer, Plant Sciences, 530-754-6788, afilmer@ucdavis.edu

David Neale, Plant Sciences, (530) 754-8431, dbneale@ucdavis.edu

Charles Langley, Evolution and Ecology, 530-752-4085, chlangley@ucdavis.edu

Pat Bailey, Research news (emphasis: agricultural and nutritional sciences, and veterinary medicine), 530-219-9640, pjbailey@ucdavis.edu

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