This document summarizes a seminar on molecular approaches for genetic engineering of male sterility. It begins by defining male sterility as the inability of flowering plants to produce functional pollen. It then describes different types of male sterility including genic, cytoplasmic, and chemically-induced sterility. The document discusses the molecular basis of male sterility and anther development, using the T cytoplasm in maize as a model system. It also outlines several genetic engineering approaches that have been used to induce male sterility in crops like tobacco, including the use of ribonuclease genes, a deacetylase system, a two-component barnase system, and engineering chloroplast-induced sterility.