• Plant tissue engineering improves drough

    From ScienceDaily@1337:3/111 to All on Tue Jun 30 21:35:30 2020
    Plant tissue engineering improves drought and salinity tolerance
    University of Nevada, Reno research addressing future population growth
    and food shortages

    Date:
    June 30, 2020
    Source:
    University of Nevada, Reno
    Summary:
    After several years of experimentation, scientists have engineered
    thale cress, or Arabidopsis thaliana, to behave like a succulent,
    improving water-use efficiency, salinity tolerance and reducing
    the effects of drought. The tissue succulence engineering method
    devised for this small flowering plant can be used in other plants
    to improve drought and salinity tolerance with the goal of moving
    this approach into food and bioenergy crops.



    FULL STORY ========================================================================== After several years of experimentation, scientists have engineered thale
    cress, or Arabidopsis thaliana, to behave like a succulent, improving
    water-use efficiency, salinity tolerance and reducing the effects of
    drought. The tissue succulence engineering method devised for this
    small flowering plant can be used in other plants to improve drought
    and salinity tolerance with the goal of moving this approach into food
    and bioenergy crops.


    ========================================================================== "Water-storing tissue is one of the most successful adaptations in plants
    that enables them to survive long periods of drought. This anatomical
    trait will become more important as global temperatures rise, increasing
    the magnitude and duration of drought events during the 21st century,"
    said University of Nevada, Reno Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
    Professor John Cushman, co-author of a new scientific paper on plant
    tissue succulence published in the Plant Journal.

    The work will be combined with another of Cushman's projects:
    engineering another trait called crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM),
    a water-conserving mode of photosynthesis that can be applied to plants
    to improve water-use efficiency.

    "The two adaptations work hand-in-hand," Cushman, of the University's
    College of Agriculture, Biotechnology & Natural Resources, said. "Our
    overall goal is to engineer CAM, but in order to do this efficiently
    we needed to engineer a leaf anatomy that had larger cells to store
    malic acid that accumulates in the plant at night. An added bonus was
    that these larger cells also served to store water to overcome drought
    and to dilute salt and other ions taken up by the plant, making them
    more salt tolerant." When a plant takes up carbon dioxide, it takes it
    through its pores on the leaf, called stomata. They open their stomata so carbon dioxide goes in, and then it gets fixed into sugars and all other compounds that support most of life on earth. But, when stomata open,
    not only does carbon dioxide come in, but also water vapor goes out, and because plants transpire to cool themselves, they lose enormous amounts
    of water." Cushman's team of scientists created genetically modified
    A. thaliana with increased cell size resulting in larger plants with
    increased leaf thickness, more water-storage capacity, and fewer and
    less open stomatal pores to limit water loss from the leaf due to the overexpression of a gene, known as VvCEB1 to scientists. The gene is
    involved in the cell expansion phase of berry development in wine grapes.



    ==========================================================================
    The resulting tissue succulence serves two purposes.

    "Larger cells have larger vacuoles to store malate at night, which serves
    as the carbon source for carbon dioxide release and refixation, by what's called Rubisco enzyme action, during the day behind closed stomatal pores, thereby limiting photorespiration and water loss" Cushman said. "And,
    the succulent tissue traps the carbon dioxide that is released during
    the day from the decarboxylation of malate so that it can be refixed
    more efficiently by Rubisco.

    One of the major benefits of VvCEB1 gene overexpression was the
    observed improvements in whole-plant instantaneous and integrated
    water-use efficiency, which increased up to 2.6-fold and 2.3-fold, respectively. Water-use efficiency is the ratio of carbon fixed or biomass produced to the rate of transpiration or water loss by the plant. These improvements were correlated with the degree of leaf thickness and
    tissue succulence, as well as lower stomatal pore density and reduced
    pore openings.

    "We tried a number of candidate genes, but we only observed this
    remarkable phenotype with the VvCEB1 gene," Cushman said. "We typically
    will survey between 10 to 30 independent transgenic lines, and then
    these are grown for two to three generations before detailed testing." Arabidopsis thaliana is a powerful model for the study of growth and development processes in plants. It is a small weed-like plant that has a
    short generation time of about six weeks and grows well under laboratory conditions where it produces large amounts of seeds.



    ========================================================================== Engineered tissue succulence is expected to provide an effective strategy
    for improving water?use efficiency, drought avoidance or attenuation,
    salinity tolerance and for optimizing performance of CAM.

    CAM plants are very smart, keeping their stomata closed during the day,
    and only opening them at night when evapotranspiration is low because it
    is cooler and the sun is not shining, Cushman explained. The significance
    of CAM is found in its unique ability to conserve water. Where most plants would take in carbon dioxide during the day, CAM plants do so at night.

    "Essentially, CAM plants are five to six times more water-use efficient, whereas most plants are very water inefficient," he said. "The tissue succulence associated with CAM and other adaptive traits like thicker
    cuticles and the accumulation of epicuticular waxes, means that they
    can reduce leaf heating during the day by reflecting some of the light
    hitting the leaf. Many desert-adapted CAM plants also have a greater
    ability to tolerate high temperatures." With demand for agricultural
    products expected to increase by as much as 70% to serve a growing
    human population, which is predicted to reach about 9.6 billion by
    2050, Cushman and his team are pursuing these biotechnology solutions
    to address potential future food and bioenergy shortages.

    "We plan to move both tissue succulence and CAM engineering into crop
    plants.

    This current work is proof-of-concept," Cushman said.

    The work was funded by the Department of Energy, Office of Science,
    Genomic Science Program.


    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by University_of_Nevada,_Reno. Note:
    Content may be edited for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Sung Don Lim, Jesse A. Mayer, Won Cheol Yim, John C. Cushman. Plant
    tissue succulence engineering improves water‐use efficiency,
    water‐deficit stress attenuation and salinity tolerance in
    Arabidopsis. The Plant Journal, 2020; DOI: 10.1111/tpj.14783 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/06/200630125138.htm

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