Oats are an essential part of a balanced diet thanks to their high fibre content and ability to help lower bad cholesterol and improve cardiac health. Now, UM researchers have contributed to a scientific breakthrough that could change how the crop is bred for the future.
An international team, including UM’s Dr.Harmeet Chawla from the Faculty of Agricultural and Food Sciences, have recently succeeded in creating an oat pangenome that maps the plant’s entire genome, as published in Nature.
Mapping the oat pangenome
The study marks the first time the oat genome has been successfully mapped. This process is particularly complex because the plant has six sets of chromosomes, known as a hexaploid. The team used state-of-the-art gene sequencing technologies to examine the genomes from 33 oat plant lines from both wild and cultivated varieties.