Chinese and other global scientists jointly solve genetics mystery of Mendel's peas
A team of international scientists, mainly from China and the United Kingdom, has jointly identified the genetic variants behind all seven traits used by Gregor Mendel more than 160 years ago to discover the basic laws of inheritance, solving a long-standing mystery in biology. The findings were published this week in the journal Nature.
The study, titled Genomic and genetic insights into Mendel's pea genes, was led by Cheng Shifeng, a professor of the Agricultural Genomics Institute at Shenzhen, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, alongside Noam Chayut and Noel Ellis, who are professors at the UK-based John Innes Centre.
By combining modern genomics, high-throughput phenotyping, and computational biology, the team revisited Mendel's landmark 1865 experiments with garden peas.
- Chinese leaders attend deliberations at annual legislative session
- China names flag bearers for Milano-Cortina 2026 Winter Paralympics
- NPC deputies from military, armed police review government work report
- Xi urges major provincial economies to gain experience in solving new problems
- Professional managers key to rural vitalization, expert says
- Chinese clinical trial shows breakthrough in liver cancer survival

































