Isoleucine 309 acts as a C 4 catalytic switch that increases ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (rubisco) carboxylation rate in Flaveria<i/>

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

Authors

Whitney, Spencer
Sharwood, Robert
Orr, Douglas
White, Sarah
Alonso, Hernan
Galmes, Jeroni

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

National Academy of Sciences (USA)

Abstract

Improving global yields of important agricultural crops is a complex challenge. Enhancing yield and resource use by engineering improvements to photosynthetic carbon assimilation is one potential solution. During the last 40 million years C4 photosynthesis has evolved multiple times, enabling plants to evade the catalytic inadequacies of the CO2-fixing enzyme, ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (rubisco). Compared with their C3 ancestors, C4 plants combine a faster rubisco with a biochemical CO2- concentrating mechanism, enabling more efficient use of water and nitrogen and enhanced yield. Here we show the versatility of plastome manipulation in tobacco for identifying sequences in C4-rubisco that can be transplanted into C3-rubisco to improve carboxylation rate (VC). Using transplastomic tobacco lines expressing native and mutated rubisco large subunits (L-subunits) from Flaveria pringlei (C3), Flaveria floridana (C3-C4), and Flaveria bidentis (C4), we reveal that Met-309-Ile substitutions in the L-subunit act as a catalytic switch between C4 (309Ile; faster VC, lower CO2 affinity) and C3 (309Met; slower VC, higher CO2 affinity) catalysis. Application of this transplastomic system permits further identification of other structural solutions selected by nature that can increase rubisco VC in C3 crops. Coengineering a catalytically faster C3 rubisco and a CO2-concentrating mechanism within C3 crop species could enhance their efficiency in resource use and yield.

Description

Citation

Source

PNAS - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

Open Access

License Rights

Restricted until