BBSRC Institute Strategic Programme: Delivering Sustainable Wheat (DSW) Partner Grant
Lead Research Organisation:
University of Bristol
Department Name: Biological Sciences
Abstract
Delivering Sustainable Wheat (DSW) programme is needed because wheat is an indispensable global staple and the major crop of the UK and Western Europe. Wheat will play a crucial part in feeding a world population of 10B by 2050 but its production is fragile as more than half the world supply is from just five countries. This fragility has been tragically demonstrated by the war in Ukraine, an important wheat exporter. Future increases in wheat production have to be achieved without equivalent growth in fertiliser (nitrogen fertilisers are a major source of greenhouse gasses) and water use (all wheat growing regions suffer ground water decline). While facing these challenges farmers are also confronted with yield limiting effects of climate change and new diseases. Adaptations are needed to achieve sustainable production in the coming decades. Wheat also plays an important role in delivering human nutrition. With further enhancements reductions in human misery and healthcare costs are possible by filling dietary gaps with more nutritious wheat. DSW will form a uniquely coordinated UK contribution n to these challenges with strong linkages to the international wheat community. It is in a strong position to do this because the current wheat programme (DFW) has developed world leading experimental platform for wheat research. Extensive specialist gene discovery populations allow us to sample the majority of natural diversity available and to show which elements of this diversity are useful for breeders in tackling the challenges described. DFW uncovered the genetic code for 1000s of these lines. This means that after locating useful genes DSW can understand their role in molecular networks controlling targeted characteristics. With gene editing the function of these DNA changes will be proved. These tools and resources, accessible because of open and fair data access, are powerful but need to be directed towards the right questions. DSW is focussed on crop characteristics chosen in long term discussion with the widest possible group of wheat experts. It will advance understanding of yield determination to increase
productivity without equal rates of increase in fertiliser use, so minimising CO2 emissions. Alternative strategies of wheat development which increases yield with minimal sensitivity to temperature will be uncovered. DSW will even investigate how wheat can be a CO2 sink and achieve Net Zero status, for example by deep rooting and assess these new characteristics in farming systems that reflect changes in agriculture, such as the move from ploughing to reduced cultivation practices. This research depends on a deep understanding of the dynamic process of photosynthesis. DSW will
identify new disease resistances for existing disease threats and play its part in predicting new threats. Long term solutions for sustainable disease resistance will be found and incorporated into sustainable integrated pest management programmes. The goal to increase nutritional benefits of wheat will focus on Iron, Zinc, Calcium and fibre. For the first time, the wheat programme will conduct human intervention trials to provide direct evidence for the physiological benefits of nutritionally improved wheat. At the heart of the programme, open and fair data access will ensure that DSW delivers. Again, DSW has set up the platform that this excellent research can be translated into progress for plant breeders. DSW invests in pre-breeding so that the new genes, knowledge and new types of wheat feed into breeding. This highly integrated cross disciplinary programme could not be achieved by any one institution. DSW brings together the complementary skills of four research Institutes (John Innes Centre, Rothamsted, Quadram Institute, and Earlham) and five universities (Leeds, Nottingham, Lancaster, Bristol, and Imperial College) and the National Institute of Agricultural Botany.
productivity without equal rates of increase in fertiliser use, so minimising CO2 emissions. Alternative strategies of wheat development which increases yield with minimal sensitivity to temperature will be uncovered. DSW will even investigate how wheat can be a CO2 sink and achieve Net Zero status, for example by deep rooting and assess these new characteristics in farming systems that reflect changes in agriculture, such as the move from ploughing to reduced cultivation practices. This research depends on a deep understanding of the dynamic process of photosynthesis. DSW will
identify new disease resistances for existing disease threats and play its part in predicting new threats. Long term solutions for sustainable disease resistance will be found and incorporated into sustainable integrated pest management programmes. The goal to increase nutritional benefits of wheat will focus on Iron, Zinc, Calcium and fibre. For the first time, the wheat programme will conduct human intervention trials to provide direct evidence for the physiological benefits of nutritionally improved wheat. At the heart of the programme, open and fair data access will ensure that DSW delivers. Again, DSW has set up the platform that this excellent research can be translated into progress for plant breeders. DSW invests in pre-breeding so that the new genes, knowledge and new types of wheat feed into breeding. This highly integrated cross disciplinary programme could not be achieved by any one institution. DSW brings together the complementary skills of four research Institutes (John Innes Centre, Rothamsted, Quadram Institute, and Earlham) and five universities (Leeds, Nottingham, Lancaster, Bristol, and Imperial College) and the National Institute of Agricultural Botany.
Technical Summary
This project represents Bristol's contribution to the delivery of the following Institute Strategic Programme Grant: BBSRC Institute Strategic Programme: Delivering Sustainable Wheat (DSW), BB/X011003/1
Publications
Burridge A
(2023)
Development of a Next Generation SNP Genotyping Array for Wheat
Burridge AJ
(2024)
Development of a next generation SNP genotyping array for wheat.
in Plant biotechnology journal
Burridge, A.J.
(2024)
Development of a Next Generation SNP Genotyping Array for Wheat
in Plant Biotechnology Journal
Cheng S
(2024)
Harnessing landrace diversity empowers wheat breeding.
in Nature
| Title | AXIOM TANG1.1 384S384 array data |
| Description | 5 x 384 format genotype array data |
| Type Of Material | Database/Collection of data |
| Year Produced | 2025 |
| Provided To Others? | Yes |
| Impact | Samples were sent to us from the USA to confirm the feasibility of screening American material using a UK developed genotyping array. Improved marker resolution for screening. Researchers are able to use data for their own research purposes. |
| Description | Analysis of wheat relative introgressions in Wat-seq collection |
| Organisation | John Innes Centre |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Sector | Academic/University |
| PI Contribution | Provision of skim sequence date to be analysed using a custom pipline to identify areas of potential introgression in the wider watseq set and subsequent analysis and tool development. |
| Collaborator Contribution | Development of the pipeline |
| Impact | A comprehensive catalogue of areas of similarity or putative introgressions in a dataset of over 1000 wheat accessions. |
| Start Year | 2022 |
| Description | Genotyping of toolkit germplasm |
| Organisation | John Innes Centre |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Sector | Academic/University |
| PI Contribution | Collaborating with Simon Griffiths and team to provide genotype data for the full set of toolkit lines produced during WISP, DFW and DSW, working towards a publication of these data. |
| Collaborator Contribution | Development of the genetic material and associated phenotype data. |
| Impact | Fully characterised breeding lines sent to breeders for assessment in their field trials Genotype data for QTL/GWAS and marker assisted selection provided |
| Start Year | 2015 |
| Description | Genotyping of wheat germplasm for project partners |
| Organisation | John Innes Centre |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Sector | Academic/University |
| PI Contribution | Genotyping of germplasm to enable QTL analysis, GWAS and marker assisted selection. |
| Collaborator Contribution | Provision of germplasm and phenotype data. |
| Impact | Analysis of traits relevant to DSW |
| Start Year | 2024 |
| Description | Genotyping of wheat germplasm for project partners |
| Organisation | Rothamsted Research |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Sector | Academic/University |
| PI Contribution | Genotyping of germplasm to enable QTL analysis, GWAS and marker assisted selection. |
| Collaborator Contribution | Provision of germplasm and phenotype data. |
| Impact | Analysis of traits relevant to DSW |
| Start Year | 2024 |
| Description | Provision of wheat relative sequence data to detect introgressions in new UK reference assemblies |
| Organisation | Earlham Institute |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Sector | Academic/University |
| PI Contribution | Provided skim sequence data of 97 wheat relatives for the identification of introgressions in two new UK wheat genome reference assemblies - Paragon and Cadenza. |
| Collaborator Contribution | Provision of genotype data and expertise. |
| Impact | The identification of introgressions in the new assemblies to be added to the upcoming publication. |
| Start Year | 2025 |
| Description | Oral presentation at the 2024 International Plant and Animal Genomics Meeting, San Diego |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | A talk or presentation |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | International |
| Primary Audience | Professional Practitioners |
| Results and Impact | A presentation was made on the use of our minimal marker selection algorithm for the optimisation of a novel wheat genotyping system. The audience consisted of around 200 academics and plant breeding industry researchers. Follow up meetings were help with researchers at overseas Universities and European plant breeding companies. |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2024 |
| URL | https://pag.confex.com/pag/31/meetingapp.cgi/Paper/54269 |
