| Literature DB >> 33946791 |
Oluwaseun Olayemi Aluko1,2, Chuanzong Li1,2, Qian Wang1, Haobao Liu1.
Abstract
Photosynthetic carbon converted to sucrose is vital for plant growth. Sucrose acts as a signaling molecule and a primary energy source that coordinates the source and sink development. Alteration in source-sink balance halts the physiological and developmental processes of plants, since plant growth is mostly triggered when the primary assimilates in the source leaf balance with the metabolic needs of the heterotrophic sinks. To measure up with the sink organ's metabolic needs, the improvement of photosynthetic carbon to synthesis sucrose, its remobilization, and utilization at the sink level becomes imperative. However, environmental cues that influence sucrose balance within these plant organs, limiting positive yield prospects, have also been a rising issue over the past few decades. Thus, this review discusses strategies to improve photosynthetic carbon assimilation, the pathways actively involved in the transport of sucrose from source to sink organs, and their utilization at the sink organ. We further emphasize the impact of various environmental cues on sucrose transport and utilization, and the strategic yield improvement approaches under such conditions.Entities:
Keywords: environmental factors; photosynthetic carbon assimilation; source-to-sink relationship; sucrose transporters; sucrose transports; sucrose utilization
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33946791 PMCID: PMC8124652 DOI: 10.3390/ijms22094704
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Sucrose utilization at the source and sink level. To fully optimize crop yields through sucrose utilization, improving photosynthetic carbon assimilation for sucrose synthesis, transport of sucrose to the sink, and its utilization at the sink level become imperative. Given the efficient utilization of sucrose, other environmental factors can disrupt sucrose distribution within plant organs.
Approaches employed to improve photosynthetic carbon assimilation in different plants.
| Host Species | Strategies | Summary of Findings | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| C3 and C4 plants | Modification of in vitro assay method to measure the variability in carboxylase and decarboxylase activity of C3 and C4 leaf extract. | RuBisCO activation status is lower in mature C4 monocot leaves than in C3 monocots. | [ |
| Rice | Model analysis conducted on both pot and experiments under various nitrogen rates. | Improved carboxylation rate due to higher RuBisCO content in mutant plants. | [ |
| Tobacco | Expression of zeaxanthin and violaxanthin in the xanthophyll cycle coupled with an increased amount of the photosystem II subunit. | Greater than 15% increase in plant biomass. | [ |
| Potato | Overexpression of pyrophosphatase in mesophyll cells. | Enhanced source and sink capacity and a doubling in starch yield of tuber. | [ |
| Wheat | Overexpression of | Increased leaf photosynthesis, biomass, and crop-yield potential. | [ |
| Tobacco | Overexpression of | Improved photosynthetic capacity and crop yield. | [ |
|
| Independent or synergetic alteration of sedoheptulose 1,7-bisphosphatase (SBPase), glycine decarboxylase H-protein (GDC-H) protein, and fructose 1,6-bisphophate aldolase (FBPA). | Enhanced carboxylation efficiency, vegetative biomass, and maximal seed-yield increase. | [ |
| Potato | Expression of polyprotein comprising three subunits of | High carbohydrate levels synthesized in the source leaves were utilized by the sink organ, facilitating a 2.3-fold increase in tuber yield. | [ |
|
| Expression of a synthetic, light-gated K+ channel BLINK1 in guard cells surrounding stomatal pores. | BLINK1 facilitates a 2.2-fold increase in biomass in fluctuating light without the cost of water use by the plant. | [ |
Figure 2Schematic diagram of symplastic and apoplastic transport of sugar from source to sink organ.
Figure 3The impact of environmental factors on photo-assimilate transport.
Figure 4Sugar transporters are involved in environmental stress mitigation. Under stressed conditions, overexpression of sugar transporters (SWEETs, SUTs/SUCs) in plants (right) enhances the transport of soluble sugars, such as sucrose from source leaves to the sink organs for fruit development. Meanwhile, under the same conditions, increased sucrose accumulation in the leaves of nontransgenic plants (left) inhibits sucrose export from the source leaves, limiting sink (fruit) growth and development.