bundle sheath
Recently Published Documents


TOTAL DOCUMENTS

545
(FIVE YEARS 65)

H-INDEX

50
(FIVE YEARS 3)

Plant Direct ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (12) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jacob D. Washburn ◽  
Josh Strable ◽  
Patrick Dickinson ◽  
Satya S. Kothapalli ◽  
Julia M. Brose ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiuru Dai ◽  
Xiaoyu Tu ◽  
Baijuan Du ◽  
Pengfei Dong ◽  
Shilei Sun ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jinghua Lu ◽  
Chunyang Pan ◽  
Xin Li ◽  
Zejun Huang ◽  
Jinshuai Shu ◽  
...  

AbstractLeaf veins play an important role in plant growth and development, and the bundle sheath (BS) is believed to greatly improve the photosynthetic efficiency of C4 plants. The OBV mutation in tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) results in dark veins and has been used widely in processing tomato varieties. However, physiological performance has difficulty explaining fitness in production. In this study, we confirmed that this mutation was caused by both the increased chlorophyll content and the absence of bundle sheath extension (BSE) in the veins. Using genome-wide association analysis and map-based cloning, we revealed that OBV encoded a C2H2L domain class transcription factor. It was localized in the nucleus and presented cell type-specific gene expression in the leaf veins. Furthermore, we verified the gene function by generating CRISPR/Cas9 knockout and overexpression mutants of the tomato gene. RNA sequencing analysis revealed that OBV was involved in regulating chloroplast development and photosynthesis, which greatly supported the change in chlorophyll content by mutation. Taken together, these findings demonstrated that OBV affected the growth and development of tomato by regulating chloroplast development in leaf veins. This study also provides a solid foundation to further decipher the mechanism of BSEs and to understand the evolution of photosynthesis in land plants.


Oecologia ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jennifer E. Johnson ◽  
Christopher B. Field ◽  
Joseph A. Berry

AbstractHere, we describe a model of C3, C3–C4 intermediate, and C4 photosynthesis that is designed to facilitate quantitative analysis of physiological measurements. The model relates the factors limiting electron transport and carbon metabolism, the regulatory processes that coordinate these metabolic domains, and the responses to light, carbon dioxide, and temperature. It has three unique features. First, mechanistic expressions describe how the cytochrome b6f complex controls electron transport in mesophyll and bundle sheath chloroplasts. Second, the coupling between the mesophyll and bundle sheath expressions represents how feedback regulation of Cyt b6f coordinates electron transport and carbon metabolism. Third, the temperature sensitivity of Cyt b6f is differentiated from that of the coupling between NADPH, Fd, and ATP production. Using this model, we present simulations demonstrating that the light dependence of the carbon dioxide compensation point in C3–C4 leaves can be explained by co-occurrence of light saturation in the mesophyll and light limitation in the bundle sheath. We also present inversions demonstrating that population-level variation in the carbon dioxide compensation point in a Type I C3–C4 plant, Flaveriachloraefolia, can be explained by variable allocation of photosynthetic capacity to the bundle sheath. These results suggest that Type I C3–C4 intermediate plants adjust pigment and protein distributions to optimize the glycine shuttle under different light and temperature regimes, and that the malate and aspartate shuttles may have originally functioned to smooth out the energy supply and demand associated with the glycine shuttle. This model has a wide range of potential applications to physiological, ecological, and evolutionary questions.


Author(s):  
Yuzhen Fan ◽  
Andrew Scafaro ◽  
Shinichi Asao ◽  
Robert Furbank ◽  
Antony Agostino ◽  
...  

Our understanding of the regulation of respiration in C plants, where mitochondria play different roles in the different types of C photosynthetic pathway, remains limited. We examined how leaf dark respiration rates (R), in the presence and absence of added malate, vary in monocots representing the three classical biochemical types of C photosynthesis (NADP-ME, NAD-ME and PCK) using intact leaves and extracted bundle sheath strands. In particular, we explored to what extent R are associated with mitochondrial number, volume and ultrastructure. We found that the respiratory response of NAD-ME and PCK type bundle sheath strands to added malate was associated with differences in mitochondrial number, volume, and/or ultrastructure, while NADP-ME type bundle sheath strands did not respond to malate addition. In general, mitochondrial traits reflected the contributions mitochondria make to photosynthesis in the three C types. However, despite the obvious differences in mitochondrial traits, no clear correlation was observed between these traits and R. We suggest that R is primarily driven by cellular maintenance demands and not mitochondrial composition per se, in a manner that is somewhat independent of mitochondrial organic acid cycling in the light.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hongchang Cui

With a rapidly growing world population and dwindling natural resources, we are now facing the enormous challenge of increasing crop yields while simultaneously improving the efficiency of resource utilization. Introduction of C4 photosynthesis into C3 crops is widely accepted as a key strategy to meet this challenge because C4 plants are more efficient than C3 plants in photosynthesis and resource usage, particularly in hot climates, where the potential for productivity is high. Lending support to the feasibility of this C3-to-C4 engineering, evidence indicates that C4 photosynthesis has evolved from C3 photosynthesis in multiple lineages. Nevertheless, C3-to-C4 engineering is not an easy task, as several features essential to C4 photosynthesis must be introduced into C3 plants. One such feature is the spatial separation of the two phases of photosynthesis (CO2 fixation and carbohydrate synthesis) into the mesophyll and bundle sheath cells, respectively. Another feature is the Kranz anatomy, characterized by a close association between the mesophyll and bundle sheath (BS) cells (1:1 ratio). These anatomical features, along with a C4-specific carbon fixation enzyme (PEPC), form a CO2-concentration mechanism that ensures a high photosynthetic efficiency. Much effort has been taken in the past to introduce the C4 mechanism into C3 plants, but none of these attempts has met with success, which is in my opinion due to a lack of system-level understanding and manipulation of the C3 and C4 pathways. As a prerequisite for the C3-to-C4 engineering, I propose that not only the mechanisms that control the Kranz anatomy and cell-type-specific expression in C3 and C4 plants must be elucidated, but also a good understanding of the gene regulatory network underlying C3 and C4 photosynthesis must be achieved. In this review, I first describe the past and current efforts to increase photosynthetic efficiency in C3 plants and their limitations; I then discuss a systems approach to tackling down this challenge, some practical issues, and recent technical innovations that would help us to solve these problems.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jennifer J Arp ◽  
Shrikaar Kambhampati ◽  
Kevin Chu ◽  
Somnath Koley ◽  
Lauren M Jenkins ◽  
...  

C4 photosynthesis is an adaptive photosynthetic pathway which concentrates CO2 around Rubisco in specialized bundle sheath cells to reduce photorespiration. Historically, the pathway has been characterized into three different subtypes based on the decarboxylase involved, although recent work has provided evidence that some plants can use multiple decarboxylases, with maize in particular using both the NADP-malic enzyme (NADP-ME) pathway and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PEPCK) pathway. Parallel C4 pathways could be advantageous in balancing energy and reducing equivalents between bundle sheath and mesophyll cells, in decreasing the size of the metabolite gradients between cells and may better accommodate changing environmental conditions or source to sink demands on growth. The enzyme activity of C4 decarboxylases can fluctuate with different stages of leaf development, but it remains unclear if the pathway flexibility is an innate aspect of leaf development or an adaptation to the leaf microenvironment that is regulated by the plant. In this study, variation in the two C4 pathways in maize were characterized at nine plant ages throughout the life cycle. Two positions in the canopy were examined for variation in physiology, gene expression, metabolite concentration, and enzyme activity, with particular interest in asparagine as a potential regulator of C4 decarboxylase activity. Variation in C4 and C3 metabolism was observed for both leaf age and canopy position, reflecting the ability of C4 pathways to adapt to changing microenvironments.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document