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Scientists Create Versatile “All-in-One” Platform for Stacking Multiple Traits in Crops

June 5, 2026
in Biology
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Scientists Create Versatile “All-in-One” Platform for Stacking Multiple Traits in Crops — Biology

Scientists Create Versatile “All-in-One” Platform for Stacking Multiple Traits in Crops

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In the relentless pursuit of agricultural innovation, breeding crops that possess a combination of multiple favorable attributes remains a formidable challenge. Conventional methods often involve prolonged breeding cycles and inefficient genetic stacking techniques, limiting the pace of crop improvement. However, a groundbreaking advancement in genome engineering has emerged from a pioneering team led by GAO Caixia at the Institute of Genetics and Developmental Biology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, promising to revolutionize the way complex traits are engineered into monocot crops such as rice, wheat, and maize.

This cutting-edge research reveals a sophisticated genome engineering platform that integrates gene knockout, precise sequence editing, and chromosome engineering into a seamlessly unified framework. Published in Nature Biotechnology on June 5, 2026, the study introduces a transformative method capable of overcoming the intrinsic limitations of traditional technologies by facilitating the efficient stacking of multiple desirable alleles within a single crop variety.

At the core of this innovation lies twin prime editing (twinPE)-mediated gene knockout (TKO), a meticulous gene disruption tool that strategically inserts a small DNA fragment containing a cluster of stop codons at targeted gene sites. Unlike CRISPR-Cas9 systems, which frequently generate unpredictable in-frame insertions or deletions, TKO ensures precise gene disruption by reliably terminating gene translation. This methodological refinement eliminates the uncertainty of frameshift mutations and unpredictable outcomes, thus optimizing editing fidelity.

Experimental validation of TKO in monocot protoplasts, including those derived from rice, wheat, and maize, exhibited remarkably high knockout efficiencies. When these edits were transferred into regenerated T₀ rice plants, the technique demonstrated an extraordinary 96.8% success rate for single-gene knockouts, underscoring its practical potential in crop genome engineering applications. This elevated efficiency marks a significant improvement over existing gene-editing approaches, presenting a new benchmark for precision agribiotechnology.

To further address the complexities of editing multiple genomic loci simultaneously without cross-interference, the team innovated a suite of ten orthogonal TKO systems. These orthogonal systems function independently, preventing unintended cross-editing events and maintaining high efficiency for multiplex gene knockouts. This is particularly crucial because conventional Cas9-mediated multiplex editing systems often suffer from a decline in effectiveness due to the accumulation of in-frame mutations across targeted loci.

Building upon the foundational capabilities of TKO and its orthogonal expansion, the researchers engineered two integrated platforms — TRIM1 and TRIM2 — collectively termed TRIM. TRIM embodies a comprehensive editing toolkit capable of executing diverse genome modifications across scales and contexts, vastly exceeding the scope of monoclonal editing methods presently available.

TRIM1 synergizes TKO with prime editing, enabling simultaneous gene knockout alongside a broad spectrum of base-level modifications including substitutions, insertions, deletions, duplications, and inversions. This versatility facilitates comprehensive genetic reprogramming within single cells. In T₀ rice plants, TRIM1 proved capable of precisely knocking out one gene while homozygously editing three additional genomic sites, achieving an impressive multiplex editing efficiency of 22.8%.

The advancements encapsulated by TRIM2 extend beyond small-scale nucleotide edits into the realm of large-scale chromosome engineering. By integrating a prime editor fused to Cre recombinase, TRIM2 empowers the insertion, replacement, deletion, inversion, and even chromosomal translocation of kilobase-sized DNA segments. This capability addresses a critical gap, allowing precise chromosomal rearrangements that heretofore have been extraordinarily difficult to engineer with accuracy and efficiency.

Collectively, these developments position the TRIM platform as a truly “all-in-one” genome engineering system. Unlike existing tools that are restricted to limited editing modalities or small-scale changes, TRIM offers a unified strategy to stack multiple gene edits and structural variations, rapidly accelerating the process of complex trait breeding in monocot plants. This level of control and precision sets a new paradigm in plant synthetic biology and agricultural biotechnology.

The implications of TRIM for precision breeding are profound. Through its multifaceted editing capacity, the platform enables breeders and scientists to develop crop varieties with a tailored constellation of advantageous traits—such as disease resistance, improved yield, stress tolerance, and enhanced nutritional profiles—in a fraction of the time required using traditional breeding or earlier genome editing methods. In an era of escalating global food demands and climate challenges, such technological breakthroughs could be game-changing.

Furthermore, the technical enhancements made with TKO and orthogonal editing systems mitigate safety concerns by reducing off-target effects and unintended genetic alterations. This presents opportunities to streamline regulatory approval processes and foster greater acceptance of gene-edited crops within both scientific and public domains.

Looking forward, these innovations furnish a robust foundation for expanding genome engineering applications beyond monocots, potentially adapting the technology for use in diverse plant species and even in other organisms. As genome editing tools grow ever more sophisticated, platforms like TRIM exemplify the future of integrative, high-precision genetic enhancement.

In summary, the extraordinary gene engineering framework pioneered by GAO Caixia’s team marks a pivotal advancement in crop science. By enabling efficient multiplexed editing with unparalleled precision and scalability, TRIM stands poised to dramatically accelerate the stacking of beneficial alleles, empowering the next generation of resilient, high-performing crops for sustainable agriculture worldwide.


Subject of Research: Genome engineering and precision breeding in monocot crops
Article Title: Multiplexed, precise genome engineering in monocots with twin prime editing systems
News Publication Date: 5-Jun-2026
Web References: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41587-026-03174-5
References: GAO C., et al., Nature Biotechnology, June 5, 2026
Keywords: Genome engineering, twin prime editing, gene knockout, crop breeding, monocots, multiplex editing, prime editing, chromosome engineering, TRIM platform, plant biotechnology, precision agriculture

Tags: advanced gene editing platformschromosome engineering in crop breedingcrop genetic stacking techniquesefficient crop trait integrationGAO Caixia genome researchgenome engineering in monocot cropsmulti-trait stacking in rice wheat maizeNature Biotechnology crop innovationovercoming traditional breeding limitationsprecise sequence editing in agriculturetransformative agricultural biotechnologytwin prime editing for gene knockout
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