A common weed harbors important clues about how to create drought resistant crops
From: Yale News
By Bill Hathaway,
August 5, 2022 -- Yale scientists describe how Portulaca oleracea,
commonly known as purslane, integrates two distinct metabolic pathways to
create a novel type of photosynthesis that enables the weed to endure drought
while remaining highly productive, they report August 5 in the journal Science Advances.
“This is a very rare
combination of traits and has created a kind of ‘super plant’ — one that could
be potentially useful in endeavors such as crop engineering,” said Yale’s Erika
Edwards, professor of ecology and evolutionary biology and senior author of the
paper.
Plants have
independently evolved a variety of distinct mechanisms to improve
photosynthesis, the process by which green plants use sunlight to synthesize
nutrients from carbon dioxide and water. For instance, corn and sugarcane
evolved what is called C4 photosynthesis, which allows the plant to remain
productive under high temperatures. Succulents such as cacti and agaves possess
another type called CAM photosynthesis, which helps them survive in deserts and
other areas with little water. Both C4 and CAM serve different functions but
recruit the same biochemical pathway to act as “add-ons” to regular
photosynthesis.
What makes the weed
purslane unique is that it possesses both of these evolutionary adaptations —
which allows it to be both highly productive and also very drought tolerant, an
unlikely combination for a plant. Most scientists believed that C4 and CAM
operated independently within leaves of purslane.
But the Yale team, led
by co-corresponding authors and postdoctoral scholars Jose Moreno-Villena and
Haoran Zhou, conducted a spatial analysis of gene expression within the leaves
of purslane and found that C4 and CAM activity are totally integrated. They
operate in the same cells, with products of CAM reactions being processed by
the C4 pathway. This system provides unusual levels of protection for a C4
plant in times of drought.
The researchers also
built metabolic flux models that predicted the emergence of an integrated
C4+CAM system that mirrors their experimental results.
Understanding this
novel metabolic pathway could help scientists devise new ways to engineer crops
such as corn to help withstand prolonged drought, the authors say.
“In terms of
engineering a CAM cycle into a C4 crop, such as maize, there is still a lot of
work to do before that could become a reality,” said Edwards. “But what we’ve
shown is that the two pathways can be efficiently integrated and share
products. C4 and CAM are more compatible than we had thought, which leads us to
suspect that there are many more C4+CAM species out there, waiting to be
discovered.”
https://news.yale.edu/2022/08/05/common-weed-may-be-super-plant-holds-key-drought-resistant-crops
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