Abstract

The soybean is a source of several dietary components, including milk, protein, and oil. Cold stress has significantly curtailed soybean growth and yield in large areas and caused a high risk to global food security. The main objective of soybean breeders is to improve soybean resistance to cold stress. Conventional breeding approaches have made significant progress in developing cold tolerance in soybean; however, the high cost and complex genetic mechanism of cold tolerance hindered the large scale of these techniques. Molecular tools like quantitative trait loci (QTL), genome-wide association studies (GWAS), transcription factors (TFs), genetic engineering, and transcriptome have been used to identify cold tolerant genes/QTL and to develop soybean cultivars tolerant to cold stress. Clustered, regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR/Cas9) is used to increase the abiotic stress tolerance in soybean; however, its use to edit the cold tolerance genes in soybean is limited. Mapping of QTL has accelerated the master-assisted selection (MAS) in soybean. This review presents a detailed overview of molecular techniques and their use in developing cold-tolerant soybean cultivars. Using CRISPR/Cas9 would increase the speed of molecular breeding for cold tolerance in soybean. This information will assist soybean researchers in uncovering the basis of cold stress tolerance in soybean and adopting the most suitable way to breed the cold tolerant cultivars which can thrive under the extreme pressure of cold stress.

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