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Enhanced photosynthetic efficiency for increased carbon assimilation and woody biomass production in hybrid poplar INRA 717-1B4

Yumin Tao, Li-Wei Chiu, Jacob W. Hoyle, Jessica Du, Karli Rasmussen, Patrick Mellor, Christian Richey, Julie Kuiper, Madeline Fried, Rebecca A. Dewhirst, Rick Zuzow, Dominick Tucker, Alex Crites, Gary A. Orr, Matthew J. Heckert, Damaris G. Vidal, Martha L. Orosco-Cardenas, Madeline E. Hall
doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.02.16.480797
Yumin Tao
1Research & Development, Living Carbon PBC, San Francisco, CA, USA
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  • For correspondence: yumin@livingcarbon.com
Li-Wei Chiu
1Research & Development, Living Carbon PBC, San Francisco, CA, USA
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Jacob W. Hoyle
1Research & Development, Living Carbon PBC, San Francisco, CA, USA
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Jessica Du
1Research & Development, Living Carbon PBC, San Francisco, CA, USA
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Karli Rasmussen
1Research & Development, Living Carbon PBC, San Francisco, CA, USA
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Patrick Mellor
1Research & Development, Living Carbon PBC, San Francisco, CA, USA
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Christian Richey
1Research & Development, Living Carbon PBC, San Francisco, CA, USA
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Julie Kuiper
1Research & Development, Living Carbon PBC, San Francisco, CA, USA
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Madeline Fried
1Research & Development, Living Carbon PBC, San Francisco, CA, USA
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Rebecca A. Dewhirst
1Research & Development, Living Carbon PBC, San Francisco, CA, USA
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Rick Zuzow
1Research & Development, Living Carbon PBC, San Francisco, CA, USA
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Dominick Tucker
1Research & Development, Living Carbon PBC, San Francisco, CA, USA
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Alex Crites
1Research & Development, Living Carbon PBC, San Francisco, CA, USA
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Gary A. Orr
1Research & Development, Living Carbon PBC, San Francisco, CA, USA
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Matthew J. Heckert
1Research & Development, Living Carbon PBC, San Francisco, CA, USA
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Damaris G. Vidal
2The Plant Transformation Research Center, University of California Riverside, Riverside, CA, USA
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Martha L. Orosco-Cardenas
2The Plant Transformation Research Center, University of California Riverside, Riverside, CA, USA
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Madeline E. Hall
1Research & Development, Living Carbon PBC, San Francisco, CA, USA
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ABSTRACT

Increasing CO2 levels in the atmosphere and the resulting negative impacts on climate change have compelled global efforts to achieve carbon neutrality or negativity. Most such efforts focus on carbon sequestration through chemical or physical approaches. We aim to harness the power of synthetic biology to enhance plants’ natural ability to draw down and sequester carbon, thereby positively affecting climate change. Past decades of scientific progress have shed light on strategies to overcome the intrinsic limitations of carbon drawdown and fixation through photosynthesis, particularly in row crops in hopes of improving agricultural productivity for food security. Incorporating a photorespiration bypass in C3 plants has shown promising results of increased biomass and grain yield. Despite their globally dominant role in atmospheric carbon flux, the drawdown rates of most trees are currently limited by their C3 photosynthetic metabolism, and efforts to improve the photosynthetic capacity of trees, such as by reducing energy loss in photorespiration, are currently lacking. Here, we selected a photorespiration bypass pathway and tested its effectiveness on photosynthetic enhancement in hybrid poplar INRA717-IB4. The design includes a RNAi strategy to reduce the transportation of the photorespiration byproduct, glycolate, out of chloroplast and a shunt pathway to metabolize the retained glycolate back to CO2 for fixation through the Calvin-Benson cycle. Molecular and physiological data collected from two repeated growth experiments indicates that transgenic plants expressing genes in the photorespiration bypass pathway have increased photosynthetic efficiency, leading to faster plant growth and elevated biomass production. One lead transgenic event accumulated 53% more above-ground dry biomass over a five month growth period in a controlled environment. Pilot projects with photosynthesis-enhanced trees in the field are in progress. Our results provide a proof-of-concept for engineering trees to help combat climate change.

Competing Interest Statement

The authors have declared no competing interest.

Copyright 
The copyright holder for this preprint is the author/funder, who has granted bioRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. All rights reserved. No reuse allowed without permission.
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Posted February 19, 2022.
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Enhanced photosynthetic efficiency for increased carbon assimilation and woody biomass production in hybrid poplar INRA 717-1B4
Yumin Tao, Li-Wei Chiu, Jacob W. Hoyle, Jessica Du, Karli Rasmussen, Patrick Mellor, Christian Richey, Julie Kuiper, Madeline Fried, Rebecca A. Dewhirst, Rick Zuzow, Dominick Tucker, Alex Crites, Gary A. Orr, Matthew J. Heckert, Damaris G. Vidal, Martha L. Orosco-Cardenas, Madeline E. Hall
bioRxiv 2022.02.16.480797; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.02.16.480797
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Enhanced photosynthetic efficiency for increased carbon assimilation and woody biomass production in hybrid poplar INRA 717-1B4
Yumin Tao, Li-Wei Chiu, Jacob W. Hoyle, Jessica Du, Karli Rasmussen, Patrick Mellor, Christian Richey, Julie Kuiper, Madeline Fried, Rebecca A. Dewhirst, Rick Zuzow, Dominick Tucker, Alex Crites, Gary A. Orr, Matthew J. Heckert, Damaris G. Vidal, Martha L. Orosco-Cardenas, Madeline E. Hall
bioRxiv 2022.02.16.480797; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.02.16.480797

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