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Crop yields need to nearly double over the next 35 years to keep pace with projected population growth. Improving photosynthesis, via a range of genetic engineering strategies, has been identified as a promising target for crop improvement with regard to increased photosynthetic yield and better water-use efficiency (WUE). One approach is based on integrating components of the highly efficient CO(2)-concentrating mechanism (CCM) present in cyanobacteria (blue-green algae) into the chloroplasts of key C(3) crop plants, particularly wheat and rice. Four progressive phases towards engineering components of the cyanobacterial CCM into C(3) species can be envisaged. The first phase (1a), and simplest, is to consider the transplantation of cyanobacterial bicarbonate transporters to C(3) chloroplasts, by host genomic expression and chloroplast targeting, to raise CO(2) levels in the chloroplast and provide a significant improvement in photosynthetic performance. Mathematical modelling indicates that improvements in photosynthesis as high as 28% could be achieved by introducing both of the single-gene, cyanobacterial bicarbonate transporters, known as BicA and SbtA, into C(3) plant chloroplasts. Part of the first phase (1b) includes the more challenging integration of a functional cyanobacterial carboxysome into the chloroplast by chloroplast genome transformation. The later three phases would be progressively more elaborate, taking longer to engineer other functional components of the cyanobacterial CCM into the chloroplast, and targeting photosynthetic and WUE efficiencies typical of C(4) photosynthesis. These later stages would include the addition of NDH-1-type CO(2) pumps and suppression of carbonic anhydrase and C(3) Rubisco in the chloroplast stroma. We include a score card for assessing the success of physiological modifications gained in phase 1a.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jxb/ers257 | DOI Listing |
Mar Life Sci Technol
May 2025
School of Marine Sciences, Ningbo University, Ningbo, 315211 China.
Unlabelled: Phycobilisomes (PBS), the primary light-harvesting complexes in cyanobacteria, are degraded under nitrogen starvation to provide nitrogen for cell growth. This study reveals that carbon supply is a critical prerequisite for PBS degradation under nitrogen deficiency in sp. PCC 7002.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhotosynthetica
April 2025
Kamisaginomiya 3-17-11, Nakano-ku, Tokyo 165-0031, Japan.
The following scientific autobiography is presented here as a homage to Professor Kazuo Shibata, who is the one who led me to do research in photosynthesis. He had invited me to Riken (The Institute of Physical and Chemical Research), and had launched the Japan-US Collaboration Project on "" and had invited many international scientists to Riken. My research, under Shibata, started on using a sensitive method for the determination of chlorophyll , and of SDS-PAGE for the pigment protein complexes of the two photosystems.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFunct Integr Genomics
January 2025
The Energy and Resources Institute, Lodi Road, New Delhi, 110003, India.
The major limiting factor of photosynthesis in C3 plants is the enzyme, rubisco which inadequately distinguishes between carbon dioxide and oxygen. To overcome catalytic deficiencies of Rubisco, cyanobacteria utilize advanced protein microcompartments, called the carboxysomes which envelopes the enzymes, Rubisco and Carbonic Anhydrase (CA). These microcompartments facilitate the diffusion of bicarbonate ions which are converted to CO by CA, following in an increase in carbon flux near Rubisco boosting CO fixation process.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEcol Evol
June 2024
Kinneret Limnological Laboratory Israel Oceanographic and Limnological Research Migdal Israel.
Cyanobacterial blooms in freshwater sources are a global concern, and gaining insight into their causes is crucial for effective resource management and control. In this study, we present a novel computational framework for the causal analysis of cyanobacterial harmful algal blooms (cyanoHABs) in Lake Kinneret. Our framework integrates Convergent Cross Mapping (CCM) and Extended CCM (ECCM) causal networks with Bayesian Network (BN) models.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Microbiol Rep
June 2024
Department of Biochemistry and Microbiology, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, New Jersey, USA.
The photosynthetic amoeba, Paulinella provides a recent (ca. 120 Mya) example of primary plastid endosymbiosis. Given the extensive data demonstrating host lineage-driven endosymbiont integration, we analysed nuclear genome and transcriptome data to investigate mechanisms that may have evolved in Paulinella micropora KR01 (hereinafter, KR01) to maintain photosynthetic function in the novel organelle, the chromatophore.
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