| Literature DB >> 29888874 |
Greta Nölke1, Mirna Barsoum1, Marcel Houdelet1, Elsa Arcalís2, Fritz Kreuzaler1, Rainer Fischer1, Stefan Schillberg1,3.
Abstract
Increasing the productivity of crops is a major challenge in agricultural research. Given that photosynthetic carbon assimilation is necessary for plant growth, enhancing the efficiency of photosynthesis is one strategy to boost agricultural productivity. The authors attempted to increase the photosynthetic efficiency and biomass of tobacco plants by expressing individual components of the Chlamydomonas reinhardtii carbon concentration mechanism (CCM) and integrating them into the chloroplast. Independent transgenic varieties are generated accumulating the carbonic anhydrase CAH3 in the thylakoid lumen or the bicarbonate transporter LCIA in the inner chloroplast membrane. Independent homozygous transgenic lines showed enhanced CO2 uptake rates (up to 15%), increased photosystem II efficiency (by up to 18%), and chlorophyll content (up to 19%). Transgenic lines produced more shoot biomass than wild-type and azygous controls, and accumulated more carbohydrate and amino acids, reflecting the higher rate of photosynthetic CO2 fixation. These data demonstrate that individual algal CCM components can be integrated into C3 plants to increase biomass, suggesting that transgenic lines combining multiple CCM components could further increase the productivity and yield of C3 crops.Entities:
Keywords: carbon metabolism; photosynthesis; plant biomass; transgenic plants
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29888874 DOI: 10.1002/biot.201800170
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biotechnol J ISSN: 1860-6768 Impact factor: 4.677