| Literature DB >> 26124102 |
Donald R Ort1, Sabeeha S Merchant2, Jean Alric3, Alice Barkan4, Robert E Blankenship5, Ralph Bock6, Roberta Croce7, Maureen R Hanson8, Julian M Hibberd9, Stephen P Long10, Thomas A Moore11, James Moroney12, Krishna K Niyogi13, Martin A J Parry14, Pamela P Peralta-Yahya15, Roger C Prince16, Kevin E Redding11, Martin H Spalding17, Klaas J van Wijk18, Wim F J Vermaas19, Susanne von Caemmerer20, Andreas P M Weber21, Todd O Yeates2, Joshua S Yuan22, Xin Guang Zhu23.
Abstract
The world's crop productivity is stagnating whereas population growth, rising affluence, and mandates for biofuels put increasing demands on agriculture. Meanwhile, demand for increasing cropland competes with equally crucial global sustainability and environmental protection needs. Addressing this looming agricultural crisis will be one of our greatest scientific challenges in the coming decades, and success will require substantial improvements at many levels. We assert that increasing the efficiency and productivity of photosynthesis in crop plants will be essential if this grand challenge is to be met. Here, we explore an array of prospective redesigns of plant systems at various scales, all aimed at increasing crop yields through improved photosynthetic efficiency and performance. Prospects range from straightforward alterations, already supported by preliminary evidence of feasibility, to substantial redesigns that are currently only conceptual, but that may be enabled by new developments in synthetic biology. Although some proposed redesigns are certain to face obstacles that will require alternate routes, the efforts should lead to new discoveries and technical advances with important impacts on the global problem of crop productivity and bioenergy production.Entities:
Keywords: carbon capture/conversion; enabling plant biotechnology tools; light capture/conversion; smart canopy; sustainable crop production
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26124102 PMCID: PMC4507207 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1424031112
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205