🌾 Agricultural Biotechnology — From Green Revolution to Gene Revolution
Definition & Benefits · GM Crops · Bt Cotton · GM Mustard (SC 2024) · Genome Editing (Budget 2023-24) · Golden Rice · Ti Plasmid · Hybridoma · RNAi · GEAC · India Achievements · PYQs & MCQs
✅ Key Benefits of Agricultural Biotechnology:
Traditional breeding → Molecular breeding → Protoplast fusion → Genetic engineering → RNAi → (Genome Editing — newest)
Molecular Breeding: Uses DNA markers to identify and select desired traits at the gene level — dramatically faster than traditional. Key methods:
- MAS — Marker-Assisted Selection
- MARS — Marker-Assisted Recurrent Selection
- MABC — Marker-Assisted Backcrossing
- GWS/GS — Genome-Wide/Genomic Selection
• Hybrid maize — MAS used to combine yield + pest resistance
• HYV rice (IR-8) — "miracle rice" of Green Revolution
• Wheat varieties — Kalyan Sona, Sonalika (Green Revolution)
UPSC Note: Green Revolution ≠ Genetic engineering. It used conventional hybridisation and selective breeding only — NOT recombinant DNA technology or molecular markers. A classic UPSC trap!
How GM crops are made using the Ti Plasmid method (Agrobacterium tumefaciens): (1) Ti plasmid removed & T-DNA cut (2) Foreign gene (e.g. cry gene) cut with same enzyme (3) Foreign DNA inserted into T-DNA of plasmid → Recombinant Ti plasmid (4) Reinserted into bacterium (5) Bacterium used to insert T-DNA carrying foreign gene into plant chromosome (6) Plant cells grown in culture (7) Transgenic plant generated — all cells carry foreign gene.
Protoplast Fusion Diagram: Cells A & B fused → Heterokaryon → (1) Loss of B nucleus → Cybrid (A nucleus + B cytoplasm) OR (2) Nuclei fuse → Synkaryocyte/Hybrid (both A & B nuclei combined). (Source: uploaded diagram)
🔵 Hybrid (Synkaryocyte): Both nuclei AND cytoplasm of both cells combine → entirely new species. Both genomes expressed.
🟠 Cybrid (Cytoplasmic Hybrid): Nucleus of ONE parent + cytoplasm of BOTH parents. The other nucleus is eliminated. Useful for transferring mitochondria/chloroplast traits (cytoplasmic male sterility in mustard!).
How it's used: Scientists engineer plants to produce dsRNA that matches genes in pest insects or pathogens → when pest eats the plant, the dsRNA silences essential pest genes → pest dies or cannot reproduce.
Nobel Prize: RNAi was discovered by Andrew Fire & Craig Mello → Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 2006 (UPSC frequently tests this).
• Pest resistance without chemical pesticides
• Disease resistance (silencing viral genes)
• Better nutritional profiles (silencing genes that reduce vitamins)
• Delayed ripening (longer shelf life)
Example: Virus-resistant papaya (Rainbow variety) saved Hawaii's papaya industry — note: this used transgenic coat-protein technology, not strictly RNAi. True crop RNAi applications include bollworm control in corn (SmartStax PRO, USA) and nematode-resistant crops.
GM vs GE — Key Difference: GM crops contain foreign DNA from another organism (transgenic). GE crops only modify the organism's own existing DNA — no foreign DNA remains → treated as similar to naturally mutated varieties.
Budget 2023–24: ₹500 crore allocated specifically for genome editing research. ICAR identified 178 target genes across 24 field crops.
| Tool | Mechanism | Foreign DNA? | Speed | Example |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Traditional Breeding | Cross-pollination, selective breeding | No | Slow (10–15 yrs) | HYV wheat (Sonalika) |
| Molecular Breeding (MAS) | DNA marker-guided selection | No | Faster (5–8 yrs) | Hybrid maize, drought-tolerant rice |
| Genetic Engineering (rDNA) | Insert foreign gene via Ti plasmid | Yes (transgenic) | 10–12 yrs with trials | Bt cotton, Golden Rice |
| Protoplast Fusion | Fuse naked cells of two species | No external | Moderate | CMS in mustard, Pomato |
| RNAi | dsRNA silences pest/pathogen genes | Engineered dsRNA | Moderate | Virus-resistant papaya |
| Genome Editing (CRISPR) | Precise edit of native DNA, no foreign gene | No (if SDN-1/SDN-2) | Fastest (2–5 yrs) | DEP1 rice, disease-resistant wheat |
| GM Crop | Gene/Tech | Status | Key Facts for UPSC |
|---|---|---|---|
| 🌿 Bt Cotton | cry1Ac + cry2Ab from Bacillus thuringiensis | ✅ Approved 2002 | ONLY approved GM crop in India. Monsanto-Mahyco collaboration. Targets American bollworm. Occupies ~90% of India's cotton area. India became net cotton importer 2024–25 despite Bt — highlighting limits. |
| 🍆 Bt Brinjal | cry1Ac from Bt bacteria | ⛔ Moratorium since 2010 | GEAC approved 2009. Then Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh imposed indefinite moratorium in 2010 after wide public/scientific opposition. First food GM crop proposed in India. Field trials ongoing for different varieties. |
| 🌻 GM Mustard DMH-11 | barnase + barstar genes (from Bacillus amyloliquefaciens) + bar gene (from Streptomyces hygroscopicus) | ⚠ On Hold — SC orders | Developed at Delhi University (Prof. Deepak Pental's lab). GEAC approved environmental release Oct 2022. SC ordered status quo Nov 2022. Supreme Court split verdict July 2024. Still on hold. ~28–30% yield increase claimed. Herbicide tolerant variety. |
| 🌾 HT-Bt Cotton | Herbicide tolerance gene | ❌ NOT approved — illegal | NOT approved by GEAC but illegally planted on 15–25% of cotton acreage. Massive regulatory challenge — shows enforcement gap in India's GM governance. |
Created by: Crossing Indian variety Varuna with Eastern European variety Early Heera-2 using the barnase-barstar-bar gene system
barnase gene (from Bacillus amyloliquefaciens): Makes the plant male sterile (cannot self-pollinate) → forces cross-pollination
barstar gene: "Fertility restorer" — used in one parent line to restore fertility in offspring
bar gene: Herbicide tolerance (for glufosinate) — the most controversial part
NOT a pest-resistance gene — common UPSC mistake! Its primary purpose is to enable hybridisation, not pest control
India imports ~14 million tonnes of edible oil annually (~60% of domestic need). Mustard is a key domestic oilseed. Higher-yield hybrid mustard could reduce import bill significantly.
UPSC 2018 PYQ traps:
❌ "GM mustard has pest-resistance genes" → WRONG. It has barnase-barstar for hybridisation.
✅ "GM mustard allows cross-pollination/hybridisation" → CORRECT.
❌ "Developed jointly by IARI and PAU" → WRONG. Developed at Delhi University (South Campus).
SC Split Verdict (July 2024): 2-judge bench delivered split verdict. Status quo maintained. Govt must evolve national GM crop policy in consultation with states, farmers, scientists.
Why it matters for India: India has ~190 million people with Vitamin A deficiency, particularly children, causing blindness and immune weakness. Golden Rice addresses this nutritionally without requiring dietary changes. Bangladesh approved Golden Rice for commercial cultivation in 2023 — the first country to do so. India has not yet approved it; field trials are ongoing. This is a live UPSC current affairs angle — access, regulation, and ethics of biofortified GM crops.
| Policy/Initiative | Year | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| Bt Cotton commercial approval | 2002 | India's first and only approved GM crop. Changed cotton farming dramatically. |
| National Agricultural Science Fund (GE research) | 2018 | Kickstarted India's genome editing crop research formally. |
| MoEFCC GE Policy — exempted from GEAC | March 2022 | Transgene-free GE crops need only IBSC. Major regulatory simplification — enables faster deployment. |
| GEAC — GM Mustard Environmental Clearance | Oct 2022 | Approved DMH-11 for environmental release. SC ordered status quo (Nov 2022). Split verdict (July 2024). Still on hold. |
| Budget 2023–24 — ₹500 crore for Genome Editing | 2023 | Major government commitment to GE crops as priority technology. ICAR mapped 178 genes across 24 crops. |
| IGI (Jennifer Doudna's institute) trains IARI scientists | Feb 2025 | Advanced CRISPR tools (GeoCas9, CasLambda) introduced to India. India's GE capacity upgraded. |
| India becomes net cotton importer | 2024–25 | Despite Bt cotton, India now imports raw cotton ($0.4B). Highlights limits of existing biotech — need for next-gen solutions. |
⚕ Health Concerns
🌍 Environmental Concerns
- GM mustard has the genes of a soil bacterium that give the plant the property of pest resistance to a wide variety of pests.
- GM mustard has the genes that allow the plant cross-pollination and hybridization.
- GM mustard has been developed jointly by the IARI and Punjab Agricultural University.
- a) 1 and 3
- b) Only 2 ✓
- c) 2 and 3
- d) 1, 2 and 3
Statement 2 CORRECT: The barnase-barstar system makes one parent male-sterile (cannot self-pollinate) → forces cross-pollination between two parent lines → produces F1 hybrid seeds with higher yields. This is precisely the mechanism that enables hybridisation.
Statement 3 WRONG: GM mustard was developed by Prof. Deepak Pental's team at the University of Delhi, South Campus — NOT by IARI (Indian Agricultural Research Institute) or PAU (Punjab Agricultural University).
- Genome sequencing can be used to identify genetic markers for disease resistance and drought tolerance in various crop plants.
- This technique helps in reducing the time required to develop new varieties of crop plants.
- It can be used to decipher the host-pathogen relationships in crops.
- a) Only 1
- b) 2 and 3 only
- c) 1 and 2 only
- d) All of these ✓
- a) Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006
- b) Geographical Indications of Goods (Registration and Protection) Act, 1999
- c) Environment (Protection) Act, 1986 ✓
- d) Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972
Model Answer Framework:
- Introduction: India's 58% population depends on agriculture. Biotechnology = gene revolution after green revolution. Link to SDG 2 (Zero Hunger).
- Yield increase: Bt cotton (40% pest reduction) · GM crops (30% yield gains) · Hybrid molecular breeding · Genome editing (DEP1 rice)
- Input cost reduction: Pest-resistant crops reduce pesticide spend. Herbicide-tolerant crops reduce weeding costs. Farmer saves 30–40% on chemical inputs.
- Climate resilience: Drought-tolerant SAATVIK chickpea · Flood-tolerant rice · Salt-tolerant varieties for coastal farmers
- Nutritional value: Golden Rice (Vitamin A) · Biofortified maize, wheat, sorghum through HarvestPlus programme
- New income streams: Biofuel feedstock crops · High-value pharmaceutical crops (biopharming)
- Challenges: Seed cost monopoly · Regulatory delays (GM Mustard on hold) · Digital divide in farmer access to biotech
- Policy angle: GEAC reforms · DBT's National Biopharma Mission · ₹500 crore genome editing budget · Kisan Kavach for farmer safety
- Conclusion: Biotechnology is not a silver bullet but an essential tool — needs farmer-centric regulation, affordable seed pricing, and transparent governance.
- (a) Bacillus thuringiensis
- (b) Agrobacterium tumefaciens
- (c) Pseudomonas fluorescens
- (d) Rhizobium leguminosarum
1. Bt cotton contains the cry1Ac gene from Bacillus thuringiensis that produces a protein toxic to the bollworm pest.
2. Bt cotton is effective against all major cotton pests including sucking pests like whitefly and aphids.
3. Bt cotton is the only GM crop approved for commercial cultivation in India.
Which of the above is/are correct?
- (a) 1 only
- (b) 1 and 2 only
- (c) 1 and 3 only
- (d) 1, 2 and 3
- (a) A hybrid created by cross-pollination between two different plant species
- (b) A plant in which foreign DNA has been inserted using recombinant technology
- (c) A cell fusion product where the nucleus from one parent combines with the cytoplasm from both parents, with the second nucleus eliminated
- (d) A clone produced by tissue culture from a single parent plant
- (a) It banned all GM crops in India and replaced them with genome editing
- (b) It exempted transgene-free genome-edited plants from GEAC oversight, requiring only Institutional Biosafety Committee clearance — making approvals much faster than for GM crops
- (c) It allowed farmers to freely import GM seeds without government permission
- (d) It merged GEAC and RCGM into a single body for faster approvals
- (a) Iron deficiency — by inserting haemoglobin genes into rice
- (b) Vitamin A deficiency — by engineering rice to produce beta-carotene (pro-vitamin A)
- (c) Zinc deficiency — by inserting zinc transporter genes from wheat
- (d) Protein deficiency — by inserting high-lysine genes from soybean into rice
- (a) GM crops modify the plant's existing genes; GE crops introduce genes from foreign organisms
- (b) GM crops require no regulatory approval in India; GE crops require GEAC clearance
- (c) GM crops are derived from natural mutation; GE crops use artificial radiation to induce mutations
- (d) GM crops contain foreign DNA from another organism (transgenic); GE crops can modify the plant's own native DNA without introducing any exogenous DNA
| Topic | Key Facts to Remember |
|---|---|
| Definition | Range of techniques (traditional breeding → CRISPR) to improve crop traits. Includes GMOs, molecular breeding, biofortification, RNAi, genome editing. |
| Ti Plasmid Method | Agrobacterium tumefaciens Ti plasmid used as vector. cry gene → inserted into T-DNA → Recombinant Ti plasmid → reintroduced → infects plant → transgenic plant. Vector = Agrobacterium. Cargo = cry gene from Bt. |
| Bt Cotton | cry1Ac + cry2Ab genes. Only GEAC-approved GM crop in India (2002). Targets bollworm (NOT sucking pests). ~90% of cotton area. India became net cotton importer 2024–25. |
| GM Mustard DMH-11 | barnase (male sterility) + barstar (restorer) + bar (herbicide tolerance). Developed at Delhi University (NOT IARI/PAU). GEAC approved Oct 2022. SC on hold. Split verdict July 2024. NOT pest resistance — enables hybridisation. |
| Protoplast Fusion | Remove cell wall → fuse two cells → Heterokaryon. If both nuclei fuse → Hybrid (Synkaryocyte). If one nucleus lost → Cybrid. CMS in mustard uses cybrid approach. |
| RNAi | dsRNA silences pest/pathogen gene expression. Nobel 2006 (Andrew Fire & Craig Mello). Used for pest resistance. Example: virus-resistant papaya. |
| Genome Editing (GE) | CRISPR-Cas9 edits plant's OWN DNA — no foreign gene. 2022 MoEFCC policy: transgene-free GE exempt from GEAC. Budget 2023-24: ₹500 crore. DEP1 rice — more grains per panicle. |
| Golden Rice | Beta-carotene (Vitamin A) engineered into rice. For VAD (190M affected in India). Bangladesh approved 2023. India pending. Developers: Potrykus & Beyer. |
| GEAC | Constituted under Environment (Protection) Act, 1986. Under MoEFCC. Apex body for GM crop environmental release approvals. UPSC 2015 PYQ. |
| India Achievements | SAATVIK chickpea (drought-tolerant) · DEP1 genome-edited rice · IndRA & IndCA 90K SNP arrays · Kisan Kavach anti-pesticide suit · ₹500 crore GE budget (2023-24) |
| Concerns | Allergens · Antibiotic resistance markers · Superpests/superweeds · Biodiversity loss · Seed monopoly (IP/patent) · Ethical issues (animal genes in plants) · Labelling gaps |
| Latest 2025 | India net cotton importer (2024-25). US trade pressure on GM market (July 2025). IGI trained IARI scientists in CRISPR (Feb 2025). GM Mustard still on hold (SC split verdict July 2024). |
Trap 1 — "GM Mustard has pest-resistance genes" → WRONG! DMH-11 has barnase + barstar + bar genes — for hybridisation and herbicide tolerance, NOT pest resistance. This was directly tested in UPSC 2018 and remains a top-repeat trap. Bt Cotton has pest-resistance (cry) genes. GM Mustard does NOT. Don't mix the two.
Trap 2 — "GM Mustard was developed jointly by IARI and PAU" → WRONG! DMH-11 was developed by Prof. Deepak Pental's team at University of Delhi, South Campus. IARI (Indian Agricultural Research Institute, New Delhi) is a different institution. PAU (Punjab Agricultural University, Ludhiana) was not involved. UPSC 2018 tested this exact point.
Trap 3 — "Green Revolution used genetic engineering (rDNA technology)" → WRONG! The Green Revolution (1960s) used conventional hybridisation and selective breeding — NOT recombinant DNA technology. HYV seeds (IR-8 rice, Sonalika wheat) were produced through traditional cross-breeding, not GMO techniques. GM crops are post-1990s technology. This distinction matters for GS1 (History/Green Revolution) AND GS3 (Biotech).
Trap 4 — "Agrobacterium tumefaciens produces the cry protein" → WRONG! The cry proteins that kill bollworms come from Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt bacteria). Agrobacterium tumefaciens is merely the delivery vehicle/vector used to transfer the cry gene into the plant. They are completely different organisms. Bt = the source of cry genes. Agrobacterium = the truck that delivers them.
Trap 5 — "Genome-edited crops need GEAC approval just like GM crops" → WRONG! Post the March 2022 MoEFCC policy, transgene-free genome-edited crops (SDN-1 and SDN-2 categories of CRISPR editing that do not introduce foreign DNA) are exempt from GEAC oversight — they only need IBSC clearance. This is a fundamental regulatory distinction and a very high-probability UPSC 2026 question. GM crops (with foreign DNA) still need full GEAC approval.


