1. A Synthetic Photorespiratory Shortcut Enhances Photosynthesis to Boost Biomass and Grain Yield in Rice.
- Author
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Wang LM, Shen BR, Li BD, Zhang CL, Lin M, Tong PP, Cui LL, Zhang ZS, and Peng XX
- Subjects
- Biological Transport radiation effects, Carbohydrate Metabolism radiation effects, Carbon Dioxide metabolism, Cell Respiration radiation effects, Chloroplasts metabolism, Chloroplasts radiation effects, Chloroplasts ultrastructure, Gene Expression Regulation, Plant radiation effects, Metabolome radiation effects, Oryza genetics, Plant Leaves metabolism, Plant Leaves radiation effects, Plant Leaves ultrastructure, Plants, Genetically Modified, Seeds radiation effects, Transcriptome genetics, Biomass, Light, Oryza growth & development, Oryza radiation effects, Photosynthesis radiation effects, Seeds growth & development
- Abstract
Several photorespiratory bypasses have been introduced into plants and shown to improve photosynthesis by increasing chloroplastic CO
2 concentrations or optimizing energy balance. We recently reported that an engineered GOC bypass could increase photosynthesis and productivity in rice. However, the grain yield of GOC plants was unstable, fluctuating in different cultivation seasons because of varying seed setting rates. In this study, we designed a synthetic photorespiratory shortcut (the GCGT bypass) consisting of genes encoding Oryza sativa glycolate oxidase and Escherichia coli catalase, glyoxylate carboligase, and tartronic semialdehyde reductase. The GCGT bypass was guided by an optimized chloroplast transit peptide that targeted rice chloroplasts and redirected 75% of carbon from glycolate metabolism to the Calvin cycle, identical to the native photorespiration pathway. GCGT transgenic plants exhibited significantly increased biomass production and grain yield, which were mainly attributed to enhanced photosynthesis due to increased chloroplastic CO2 concentrations. Despite the increases in biomass production and grain yield, GCGT transgenic plants showed a reduced seed setting rate, a phenotype previously reported for the GOC plants. Integrative transcriptomic, physiological, and biochemical assays revealed that photosynthetic carbohydrates were not transported to grains in an efficient manner, thereby reducing the seed setting rate. Taken together, our results demonstrate that the GCGT photorespiratory shortcut confers higher yield by promoting photosynthesis in rice, mainly through increasing chloroplastic CO2 concentrations., (Copyright © 2020 The Author. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2020
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