Ensuring food security in the future is a major global challenge, particularly in the context of climate change and a growing world population. Achieving this goal requires rapid and targeted crop improvement in frame of breeding. Traditional plant breeding relies on natural genetic variation that is generated during meiosis, a special type of cell division in which chromosomes exchange genetic material. This genetic exchange occurs through a process called meiotic recombination. During recombination, programmed DNA breaks are repaired either without leaving a genetic trace or by exchanging DNA between parental chromosomes, thereby creating new combinations of traits. In many crop plants, including barley (Hordeum vulgare), this exchange is however unequal: recombination occurs mainly at chromosome ends, while large interstitial chromosome regions remain largely inaccessible to breeding. As a result, natural available genetic diversity cannot be efficiently exploited, limiting progress in crop improvement. Furthermore, plant breeding has traditionally focused almost exclusively on one visible outcome of recombination, known as crossovers. However, most recombination events are repaired in other ways that do not lead to obvious reciprocal chromosome exchanges. In particular, short, non‑reciprocal DNA exchanges between parental chromosomes (non‑crossover gene conversions) have been largely overlooked, mainly because their frequency, length, and value for plant breeding were poorly understood.
The overall objective of the MEIOBARMIX project was to overcome these limitations by uncovering basic principles underlying meiotic recombination and developing new strategies to control it. The main objectives were to (i) understand previously untapped forms of genetic variation generated during meiosis, (ii) establish novel tools to direct recombination to predefined genomic regions, and (iii) to modify recombination outcome in barley.
The project showed that meiotic recombination outcomes can be deciphered, manipulated, and even targeted to specific genomic sites. In detail, it showed that an underestimated form of genetic exchange, known as gene conversion, is in fact very frequent and represents a major, previously untapped source of natural variation. Importantly, the project also showed that meiotic recombination can be targeted to defined genomic regions in plants, including regions where genetic exchange normally does not occur.
Together, MEIOBARMIX significantly advances our understanding of how genetic diversity during meiosis is generated and provides new approaches to make better use of this diversity. By enabling more efficient breeding strategies, the project contributes to sustainable agriculture and long‑term food security.