PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Gregory Reeves AU - Pallavi Singh AU - Timo A. Rossberg AU - E. O. Deedi Sogbohossou AU - M. Eric Schranz AU - Julian M. Hibberd TI - Quantitative variation within a species for traits underpinning C<sub>4</sub> photosynthesis AID - 10.1101/253211 DP - 2018 Jan 01 TA - bioRxiv PG - 253211 4099 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2018/01/25/253211.short 4100 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2018/01/25/253211.full AB - Engineering C4 photosynthesis into C3 crops such as rice or wheat could substantially increase their yield by alleviating photorespiratory losses1,2. This objective is challenging because the C4 pathway involves complex modifications to the biochemistry, cell biology and anatomy of leaves3. Forward genetics has provided limited insight into the mechanistic basis of these characteristics and there have been no reports of significant quantitative intra-specific variation of C4 attributes that would allow trait-mapping4,5. Here we show that accessions of C4 Gynandropsis gynandra collected from locations across Africa and Asia exhibit natural variation in key characteristics of C4 photosynthesis. Variable traits include bundle sheath size and vein density, gas exchange parameters and carbon-isotope discrimination associated with the C4 state, but also abundance of transcripts encoding core enzymes of the C4 cycle. Traits relating to water use showed more quantitative variation than those associated with carbon assimilation. We propose variation in these traits likely adapted the hydraulic system for increased water use efficiency rather than improving carbon fixation, indicating that selection pressure may drive C4 diversity in G. gynandra by acting to modify water use rather than photosynthesis. As these accessions can be easily crossed and produce fertile offspring, our findings indicate that natural variation within a C4 species is sufficiently large to allow genetic-mapping of key anatomical C4 traits and regulators.