| Literature DB >> 34851109 |
Amy Wen1, Keira L Havens1, Sarah E Bloch2, Neal Shah1, Douglas A Higgins1, Austin G Davis-Richardson3, Judee Sharon4, Farzaneh Rezaei1, Mahsa Mohiti-Asli5, Allison Johnson1, Gabriel Abud6, Jean-Michel Ane4, Junko Maeda7, Valentina Infante7, Shayin S Gottlieb1, James G Lorigan1, Lorena Williams1, Alana Horton1, Megan McKellar1, Dominic Soriano1, Zoe Caron1, Hannah Elzinga1, Ashley Graham8, Rosemary Clark1, San-Ming Mak1, Laura Stupin1, Alice Robinson1, Natalie Hubbard1, Richard Broglie1, Alvin Tamsir1, Karsten Temme1.
Abstract
Agricultural productivity relies on synthetic nitrogen fertilizers, yet half of that reactive nitrogen is lost to the environment. There is an urgent need for alternative nitrogen solutions to reduce the water pollution, ozone depletion, atmospheric particulate formation, and global greenhouse gas emissions associated with synthetic nitrogen fertilizer use. One such solution is biological nitrogen fixation (BNF), a component of the complex natural nitrogen cycle. BNF application to commercial agriculture is currently limited by fertilizer use and plant type. This paper describes the identification, development, and deployment of the first microbial product optimized using synthetic biology tools to enable BNF for corn (Zea mays) in fertilized fields, demonstrating the successful, safe commercialization of root-associated diazotrophs and realizing the potential of BNF to replace and reduce synthetic nitrogen fertilizer use in production agriculture. Derived from a wild nitrogen-fixing microbe isolated from agricultural soils, Klebsiella variicola 137-1036 ("Kv137-1036") retains the capacity of the parent strain to colonize corn roots while increasing nitrogen fixation activity 122-fold in nitrogen-rich environments. This technical milestone was then commercialized in less than half of the time of a traditional biological product, with robust biosafety evaluations and product formulations contributing to consumer confidence and ease of use. Tested in multi-year, multi-site field trial experiments throughout the U.S. Corn Belt, fields grown with Kv137-1036 exhibited both higher yields (0.35 ± 0.092 t/ha ± SE or 5.2 ± 1.4 bushels/acre ± SE) and reduced within-field yield variance by 25% in 2018 and 8% in 2019 compared to fields fertilized with synthetic nitrogen fertilizers alone. These results demonstrate the capacity of a broad-acre BNF product to fix nitrogen for corn in field conditions with reliable agronomic benefits.Entities:
Keywords: Klebsiella variicola; biological nitrogen fixation; diazotroph; nitrogen fertilization; nitrogenase expression; rhizosphere
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34851109 DOI: 10.1021/acssynbio.1c00049
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Synth Biol ISSN: 2161-5063 Impact factor: 5.110