| Literature DB >> 33016576 |
Maria Ermakova1, Stéphanie Arrivault2, Rita Giuliani3, Florence Danila1, Hugo Alonso-Cantabrana1,4, Daniela Vlad5, Hirofumi Ishihara2, Regina Feil2, Manuela Guenther2, Gian Luca Borghi2, Sarah Covshoff6, Martha Ludwig7, Asaph B Cousins3, Jane A Langdale5, Steven Kelly5, John E Lunn2, Mark Stitt2, Susanne von Caemmerer1, Robert T Furbank1.
Abstract
Introduction of a C4 photosynthetic mechanism into C3 crops offers an opportunity to improve photosynthetic efficiency, biomass and yield in addition to potentially improving nitrogen and water use efficiency. To create a two-cell metabolic prototype for an NADP-malic enzyme type C4 rice, we transformed Oryza sativa spp. japonica cultivar Kitaake with a single construct containing the coding regions of carbonic anhydrase, phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) carboxylase, NADP-malate dehydrogenase, pyruvate orthophosphate dikinase and NADP-malic enzyme from Zea mays, driven by cell-preferential promoters. Gene expression, protein accumulation and enzyme activity were confirmed for all five transgenes, and intercellular localization of proteins was analysed. 13 CO2 labelling demonstrated a 10-fold increase in flux though PEP carboxylase, exceeding the increase in measured in vitro enzyme activity, and estimated to be about 2% of the maize photosynthetic flux. Flux from malate via pyruvate to PEP remained low, commensurate with the low NADP-malic enzyme activity observed in the transgenic lines. Physiological perturbations were minor and RNA sequencing revealed no substantive effects of transgene expression on other endogenous rice transcripts associated with photosynthesis. These results provide promise that, with enhanced levels of the C4 proteins introduced thus far, a functional C4 pathway is achievable in rice.Entities:
Keywords: C4 photosynthesis; metabolic engineering; rice
Year: 2020 PMID: 33016576 PMCID: PMC7955876 DOI: 10.1111/pbi.13487
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plant Biotechnol J ISSN: 1467-7644 Impact factor: 9.803