| Literature DB >> 24494738 |
Paul Brouwer1, Andrea Bräutigam2, Canan Külahoglu2, Anne O E Tazelaar1, Samantha Kurz2, Klaas G J Nierop3, Adrie van der Werf4, Andreas P M Weber2, Henriette Schluepmann1.
Abstract
Due to its phenomenal growth requiring neither nitrogen fertilizer nor arable land and its biomass composition, the mosquito fern Azolla is a candidate crop to yield food, fuels and chemicals sustainably. To advance Azolla domestication, we research its dissemination, storage and transcriptome. Methods for dissemination, cross-fertilization and cryopreservation of the symbiosis Azolla filiculoides-Nostoc azollae are tested based on the fern spores. To study molecular processes in Azolla including spore induction, a database of 37 649 unigenes from RNAseq of microsporocarps, megasporocarps and sporophytes was assembled, then validated. Spores obtained year-round germinated in vitro within 26 d. In vitro fertilization rates reached 25%. Cryopreservation permitted storage for at least 7 months. The unigene database entirely covered central metabolism and to a large degree covered cellular processes and regulatory networks. Analysis of genes engaged in transition to sexual reproduction revealed a FLOWERING LOCUS T-like protein in ferns with special features induced in sporulating Azolla fronds. Although domestication of a fern-cyanobacteria symbiosis may seem a daunting task, we conclude that the time is ripe and that results generated will serve to more widely access biochemicals in fern biomass for a biobased economy. No claim to original European Union works. New PhytologistEntities:
Keywords: Azolla filiculoides; RNAseq; biobased economy; cryopreservation; domestication; fern; sexual reproduction
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24494738 DOI: 10.1111/nph.12708
Source DB: PubMed Journal: New Phytol ISSN: 0028-646X Impact factor: 10.151