Challenges facing sustainable protein production: Opportunities for cereals

Luqman B. Safdar, M. John Foulkes, Friedrich H. Kleiner, Iain R. Searle, Rahul A. Bhosale, Ian D. Fisk*, Scott A. Boden*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

38 Citations (SciVal)
99 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Rising demands for protein worldwide are likely to drive increases in livestock production, as meat provides ∼40% of dietary protein. This will come at a significant environmental cost, and a shift toward plant-based protein sources would therefore provide major benefits. While legumes provide substantial amounts of plant-based protein, cereals are the major constituents of global foods, with wheat alone accounting for 15–20% of the required dietary protein intake. Improvement of protein content in wheat is limited by phenotyping challenges, lack of genetic potential of modern germplasms, negative yield trade-offs, and environmental costs of nitrogen fertilizers. Presenting wheat as a case study, we discuss how increasing protein content in cereals through a revised breeding strategy combined with robust phenotyping could ensure a sustainable protein supply while minimizing the environmental impact of nitrogen fertilizer.

Original languageEnglish
Article number100716
JournalPlant Communications
Volume4
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2023

Keywords

  • grain protein content
  • innovative breeding
  • protein nutrition
  • sustainability

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