Genetic Improvement of Oil Yield and Quality in Brassica Crops under Climate Stress

Authors

  • Sehar Amin Centre of Agricultural Biochemistry and Biotechnology (CABB), University of Agriculture Faisalabad. seharamin393@gmail.com
  • Shayhaq Sayed Govt of Balochistan Agriculture Cooperatives Department Agriculture Extension Date Farm Turbat. shayhaq.sayed@gmail.com
  • Samia Younas Department of Botany, Bahauddin Zakariya University, Multan. Corresponding Author; Samiayounas176@gmil.com
  • Iqra Ashraf Department of Botany Hafiz Hayat Campus University of Gujrat. iqrachaudhary1000@gmail.com
  • Mohammad Fateh Sher Khan Department of Plant Breeding Genetics, University of Agriculture Faisalabad. fatehsherfatehsher891@gmail.com
  • Mohammad Ayoob Department of Plant Breeding Genetics, University of Agriculture Faisalabad. ayoubkhoso992@gmail.com
  • Osama Akbar Department of Plant Breeding Genetics, University of Agriculture Faisalabad. osamashahwani0@gmail.com

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.63163/jpehss.v4i1.1158

Abstract

Brassica oilseed crops (B. napus, B. juncea, B. rapa, B. carinata) rank as the world’s second-largest source of vegetable oil, supplying 12–14% of global production and supporting food, biofuel, and industrial sectors valued at over US$67 billion. However, escalating climate stresses terminal heat, drought, salinity, and waterlogging severely impair reproductive success, seed filling, and oil biosynthesis, reducing yield and altering fatty-acid profiles toward less desirable compositions. This review synthesizes the genetic and physiological basis of oil yield and quality under stress, highlighting the polyploid complexity of U’s Triangle genomes, key QTL hotspots (e.g., A09 for oil content, A06 for pod shatter resistance), and master regulators such as WRI1 and FAD genes. Advances in high-throughput genomics, GWAS, and multi-omics have pinpointed stable marker-trait associations and candidate genes, while CRISPR/Cas9-mediated editing (e.g., BnFAD2 and BnaEOD3 knockouts) has already delivered high-oleic and higher-seed-weight lines. Exploitation of crop wild relatives and landraces, combined with marker-assisted pyramiding, accelerated breeding platforms, and AI-driven predictive modeling, offers a clear pathway to climate-resilient, high-oil Brassica varieties. Recent releases such as Pusa Mustard 26 and double-zero B. juncea lines demonstrate that integrated genomic strategies can simultaneously enhance stress tolerance, oil content, and nutritional quality. Continued convergence of genome editing, spatial omics, and epigenome engineering will be essential to secure stable oil production under future climate scenarios.

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Published

2026-03-04

How to Cite

Genetic Improvement of Oil Yield and Quality in Brassica Crops under Climate Stress. (2026). Physical Education, Health and Social Sciences, 4(1), 603-612. https://doi.org/10.63163/jpehss.v4i1.1158

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