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Grape Breeding: From Phenotypic to Marker-assisted Selection

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How advances in DNA sequencing and bioinformatics have revolutionized grape breeding

Abstract

A generation of grape breeders has retired over the past three years. Programs at UC Davis, Cornell, the USDA-ARS at Parlier, California, the University of Minnesota, and a new program at the USDA-ARS unit in Kearneysville, West Virginia have hired a new crop of grape breeders and geneticists. These newly-hired breeders now have access to a host of tools, including a detailed map of the 19 chromosomes in the grapevine genome, numerous DNA markers predicting important traits such as disease resistance, and the ability to use marker-assisted selection in their breeding programs. None of this existed when their predecessors started their careers in the ‘80s or ‘90s. A generation ago, almost nothing was known about grapevine genetics. Crosses were made by choosing parents with complementary traits (phenotypes), and selecting progeny that expressed the best combination of traits observed in the field. A dramatic drop in the cost of sequencing DNA has driven a revolution in grape breeding. Grape breeders, for the first time, have access to detailed genetic information to guide their efforts. They are no longer flying blind.

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This article is based on a conversation (December 2023) in which Dr. Bruce Reisch reflected on how the introduction of molecular breeding tools evolved during his 40-year career as professor of grape genetics and breeding at Cornell University (1980-2023).

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VitisGen2: Application of Next Generation Technologies to Accelerate Grapevine Cultivar Development, USDA Specialty Crops Research Initiative, Award No. 2017- 51181-26829 Cornell Cooperative Extension

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2025-11-06

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Bruce Reisch, grape breeding, genetics, bioinformatics, VitisGen project,

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Government Document

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Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International

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newsletter
interview

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tagged PDF; alternative text

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