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Singh said they have produced new types that are not only resistant, but higher-yielding than today's most popular varieties. The resistance comes not from one or two genes that convey immunity, but from an array of "multiple minor genes" that together achieve "near-immunity," the paper said. Because Ug-99 mutated and overcame one and then another major resistance gene in Kenya, researchers hope a greater number of minor blockers
-- though each alone not a major defense -- would prove a more complex challenge to the fungus. Borlaug said Ug-99's ability to mutate quickly meant crossbreeding research must continue unabated, while governments and international institutions support stepped-up production and distribution of resistant wheat varieties.
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