A Survey of the Transcriptomic Resources in Durum Wheat: Stress Responses, Data Integration and Exploitation

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Abstract

Durum wheat (Triticum turgidum subsp. durum (Desf.) Husn.) is an allotetraploid cereal crop of worldwide importance, given its use for making pasta, couscous, and bulgur. Under climate change scenarios, abiotic (e.g., high and low temperatures, salinity, drought) and biotic (mainly exemplified by fungal pathogens) stresses represent a significant limit for durum cultivation because they can severely affect yield and grain quality. The advent of next-generation sequencing technologies has brought a huge development in transcriptomic resources with many relevant datasets now available for durum wheat, at various anatomical levels, also focusing on phenological phases and environmental conditions. In this review, we cover all the transcriptomic resources generated on durum wheat to date and focus on the corresponding scientific insights gained into abiotic and biotic stress responses. We describe relevant databases, tools and approaches, including connections with other “omics” that could assist data integration for candidate gene discovery for bio-agronomical traits. The biological knowledge summarized here will ultimately help in accelerating durum wheat breeding.

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Zuluaga, D. L., Blanco, E., Mangini, G., Sonnante, G., & Curci, P. L. (2023, March 1). A Survey of the Transcriptomic Resources in Durum Wheat: Stress Responses, Data Integration and Exploitation. Plants. MDPI. https://doi.org/10.3390/plants12061267

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