| Literature DB >> 33754643 |
Nathalie Ceusters1, Johan Ceusters1,2, Natalia Hurtado-Castano3,4, Louisa V Dever5, Susanna F Boxall5, Jana Kneřová5, Jade L Waller5, Rebecca Rodick5, Wim Van den Ende6, James Hartwell5, Anne M Borland3.
Abstract
In plants with Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM), it has been proposed that the requirement for nocturnal provision of phosphoenolpyruvate as a substrate for CO2 uptake has resulted in a re-routing of chloroplastic starch degradation from the amylolytic route to the phosphorolytic route. To test this hypothesis, we generated and characterized four independent RNAi lines of the obligate CAM species Kalanchoë fedtschenkoi with a >10-fold reduction in transcript abundance of plastidic α-glucan phosphorylase (PHS1). The rPHS1 lines showed diminished nocturnal starch degradation, reduced dark CO2 uptake, a reduction in diel water use efficiency (WUE), and an overall reduction in growth. A re-routing of starch degradation via the hydrolytic/amylolytic pathway was indicated by hyperaccumulation of maltose in all rPHS1 lines. Further examination indicated that whilst operation of the core circadian clock was not compromised, plasticity in modulating net dark CO2 uptake in response to changing photoperiods was curtailed. The data show that phosphorolytic starch degradation is critical for efficient operation of the CAM cycle and for optimizing WUE. This finding has clear relevance for ongoing efforts to engineer CAM into non-CAM species as a means of boosting crop WUE for a warmer, drier future.Entities:
Keywords: CAM; gas exchange; hydrolytic pathway; phosphorolytic pathway; starch
Year: 2021 PMID: 33754643 DOI: 10.1093/jxb/erab132
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Bot ISSN: 0022-0957 Impact factor: 6.992