USDA blueprint sets vision for animal genomics
New blueprint prioritizes animal genomics research over next 10 years.
May 17, 2019
A new U.S. Department of Agriculture blueprint, published May 16 in Frontiers & Genetics, will serve as a guide for research and funding in animal genomics for 2018-27 that will facilitate genomic solutions enabling producers to meet increasing future demands for animal products by a growing world population.
USDA's Agricultural Research Service (ARS) and National Institute for Food & Agriculture (NIFA) and Iowa State University teamed up with federal, academic and industry scientists to publish the blueprint, titled "Genome to Phenome: Improving Animal Health, Production & Well-Being."
A previous blueprint, which covered 2008-17, met many of its goals, USDA said, noting that these accomplishments are outlined in the new blueprint.
"However, several areas required further research, and new topics, based on emerging technologies, needed to be explored," ARS national program leader Caird Rexroad said.
The 2018-27 blueprint states what needs to be accomplished over the next 10 years in terms of animal genomics programs, including internal funding at ARS and extramural funding at NIFA and other agencies, he added.
To develop the blueprint, ARS, NIFA and animal genomics experts convened a workshop that was supported by Iowa State through a grant from NIFA. During the workshop, experts in three categories — "Science to Practice," "Discovery Science" and "Infrastructure" — generated new objectives for characterizing the microbiome, enhancing the use of gene editing and other biotechnologies and preserving genetic diversity. Goals in the previous plan were updated within many genome research topics, USDA said.
"The blueprint identifies priorities for the kinds of research that need to be done," Rexroad said. It describes the vision, the current state of the art, the research needed to advance the field, expected deliverables and partnerships needed for each animal genomics research topic.
"With the new plan, we are able to show the return on investment in the previous decade," Rexroad added. "We also identify knowledge gaps and account for dramatic new changes in technologies when it comes to obtaining genome and DNA sequence information."
ARS national program leader Jeffrey Vallet said, "In the last 10 years, we have been successful in implementing genomic technology in different livestock. The best example is the U.S. dairy cattle industry, where genomic selection has more or less doubled the rate of genetic progress. That’s our example of the return on our investment."
The new blueprint addresses precision genomics: matching management to the genetic potential of the animal. This effort was successful thanks to a collaborative network of scientists from ARS, land-grant universities, genetics companies, breed associations and biotechnology companies, NIFA national program leader Lakshmi Matukumalli said.
"This report captures both traditional and transformational technologies to address four main goals for animal production: (1) providing nutritious food for a growing human population, (2) improving sustainability of animal agriculture, (3) increasing animal fitness and improving animal welfare and (4) meeting diverse consumer needs and choices," Matukumalli said.
Source: U.S. Department of Agriculture, which is solely responsible for the information provided and is wholly owned by the source. Informa Business Media and all its subsidiaries are not responsible for any of the content contained in this information asset.
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