Latin American & Caribbean Aquaculture 2025

October 7 - 9, 2025

Puerto Varas, Chile

Add To Calendar 08/10/2025 16:30:0008/10/2025 16:50:00America/GogotaLatin American & Caribbean Aquaculture 2025INTEGRATING GENOME EDITING INTO BREEDING PROGRAMS: ACHIEVING COMMERCIAL SCALECalbucoThe World Aquaculture Societyjohnc@was.orgfalseDD/MM/YYYYanrl65yqlzh3g1q0dme13067

INTEGRATING GENOME EDITING INTO BREEDING PROGRAMS: ACHIEVING COMMERCIAL SCALE

Carlos Pulgarin*, Alejandro P. Gutierrez, Matthew Josephson, Ashutosh Pudasaini, Yehwa Jin, Stephan Samu, Brandon Tsai, Klara Verbyla, John T. Buchanan

The Center for Aquaculture Technologies

8445 Camino Santa Fe. Suite 104. San Diego, CA, 92121. USA

cpulgarin@aquatechcenter.com



Genome editing technologies hold transformative potential for aquaculture by enabling precise and efficient modifications to key traits, thereby driving advancements in commercial-scale production. These technologies offer unique opportunities to enhance economically valuable characteristics, including sterility, growth rate, and thermal tolerance and potentially disease resistance,  which are crucial challenges in sustainable aquaculture.

 To enable large-scale  commercial adoption of genome editing in livestock, key technical challenges must be addressed, including the development of high-throughput microinjection methods to achieve high editing efficiency. Equally important is the seamless integration of genome-edited animals into breeding programs, which requires consideration of factors such as inbreeding, relatedness, and trait management.

This study presents a strategic approach to introducing genome- edited animals into a breeding nucleus, utilizing fully edited individuals to incorporate desired loci into the breeding population while maintaining trait expression control. Simulation scenarios were analysed across varying levels of inbreeding, editing efficiency, and trait effects. Results demonstrated that effective integration can be achieved within a limited number of generations, contingent on the number of starting animals and optimized mating strategies. These findings provide practical insights for accelerating the adoption of genome editing in breeding programs.

 This work showcases recent progress and innovative strategies for scaling genome editing, and the critical role of interdisciplinary collaboration in unlocking its full potential, ultimately fostering a more sustainable and resilient aquaculture industry.