How to feed the world by 2050? Recent breakthrough boosts plant growth by 40 percent

User David B (H/T) notes:

So if the gene editing can capture part of the 30% calorie loss to photorespiration, and if CO2 doubles by 2050, this looks like a win/win for those worried about food insecurity. And I wish I would be around to see how much greener the planet would become.

From EurekAlert!

Public Release: 16-Feb-2019

Carl R. Woese Institute for Genomic Biology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

192501_web
Four unmodified plants (left) grow beside four plants (right) engineered with alternate routes to shortcut photorespiration — an energy-expensive process that costs yield potential. The modified plants are able to reinvest their energy and resources to boost productivity by 40 percent. Credit Claire Benjamin/RIPE Project

One of the most significant challenges of the 21st Century is how to sustainably feed a growing and more affluent global population with less water and fertilizers on shrinking acreage, despite stagnating yields, threats of pests and disease, and a changing climate. Recent advances to address hunger through agricultural discovery will be highlighted at this year’s annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) at 8 a.m. Feb. 16, 2019, at the Marriott Wardman Park.

“The meeting this year is about ‘Science Transcending Boundaries’–the idea for the session is to highlight research that is transcending scientific and knowledge boundaries, with the ultimate goal to transcend geographic boundaries and reach smallholder farmers in Africa,” said Lisa Ainsworth, a scientist with the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service (USDA-ARS) and an adjunct professor of plant biology at the University of Illinois. Recently, Ainsworth was awarded the 2019 National Academy of Sciences Prize in Food and Agriculture Sciences.

Session speaker Donald Ort, the Robert Emerson Professor of Plant Biology and Crop Sciences at Illinois’ Carl R. Woese Institute for Genomic Biology, will discuss the global food security challenge and a recent breakthrough in Science (see original news release) that boosted crop growth by 40 percent by creating a shortcut for a glitch that plagues most food crops.

“Plants have to do three key things to produce the food we eat: capture sunlight, use that energy to manufacture plant biomass, and divert as much of the biomass as possible into yields like corn kernels or starchy potatoes,” Ort said. “In the last century, crop breeders maximized the first and third of these, leaving us with the challenge to improve the process where sunlight and carbon dioxide are fixed–called photosynthesis–to boost crop growth to meet the demands of the 21st Century.”

This landmark work is part of Realizing Increased Photosynthetic Efficiency (RIPE), an international research project that is engineering crops to photosynthesize more efficiently to sustainably increase worldwide food productivity with support from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the Foundation for Food and Agriculture Research (FFAR), and the U.K. Government’s Department for International Development (DFID).

“Land plants evolved with a biochemical glitch whereby a photosynthetic enzyme frequently captures oxygen instead of carbon dioxide, necessitating a convoluted and energy-expensive process called photorespiration to mitigate this glitch,” said Ort, who is also the deputy director of the RIPE project. “Crops like soybean and wheat waste more than 30 percent of the energy they generate from photosynthesis dealing with this glitch, but modeling suggested that photorespiratory shortcuts could be engineered to help the plant conserve its energy and reinvest it into growth.”

Borrowing genes from algae and pumpkins, the team engineered three alternate routes to replace the circuitous native photorespiration pathway in tobacco, a model plant used to show proof of concept before scientists move technologies to food crops that are much more difficult and time-consuming to engineer and test. Now, the team is translating this work to boost the yields of other crops including soybean, cowpea, rice, potato, tomato, and eggplant.

“It is incredible to imagine the calories lost to photorespiration each year around the globe,” Ort said. “To reclaim even a portion of these calories would be a huge success in our race to feed 9.7 billion people by 2050.”

Of course, Ort cautions, it will take 15 years or more for these technologies to be translated into food crops and achieve regulatory approval for distribution to farmers. When that day comes, RIPE and its sponsors are committed to ensuring that smallholder farmers, particularly in Sub-Saharan Africa and Southeast Asia, will have royalty-free access to this technology.

Other talks in this session will include “Discoveries to Improve Nitrogen Fixation in Cereals” by Jean-Michel Ane’, a professor of agronomy at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and “Genome Editing for Sustainable Crop Improvement” for the staple food crop cassava by Rebecca Bart, an assistant member at the Donald Danforth Plant Science Center, whose work is also supported by the Gates Foundation. The session will conclude with a panel discussion of how agricultural science is crossing traditional disciplines.

In addition, two leading plant scientists from the IGB will be inducted as Fellows of the AAAS: Andrew Leakey is a professor of plant biology and crop sciences at Illinois who studies plant responses to climate change as well as the development of crops that are more drought tolerant. Ray Ming is a professor of plant biology and an expert on plant genomics and sex chromosome evolution, which could help improve papaya production.

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Realizing Increased Photosynthetic Efficiency (RIPE) is engineering staple food crops to more efficiently turn the sun’s energy into yield to sustainably increase worldwide food productivity, with support from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the Foundation for Food and Agriculture Research (FFAR), and the U.K. Government’s Department for International Development (DFID).

RIPE is led by the University of Illinois in partnership with the Australian National University; Chinese Academy of Sciences; Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation; Lancaster University; Louisiana State University; University of California, Berkeley; University of Essex; and the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service.

 

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February 18, 2019 2:57 pm

”Crops like soybean and wheat waste more than 30 percent of the energy they generate from photosynthesis dealing with this glitch, but modeling suggested that photorespiratory shortcuts could be engineered to help the plant conserve its energy and reinvest it into growth.”

Is it really a glitch or again something we humans miss? Like DNA that was supposed to be junk?

Reply to  Guido Vobig
February 18, 2019 5:37 pm

The “glitch” is not photo-synthesis, but rather an aspect of photo-respiration (significant in C3 plants). As for photo-respiration it is not a’junk” plants do for no benefit.

Photo-respiration does result in 20 – 30% of photo-synthesis’ “fixed” carbon being diverted to CO2 (ie: carbon lost for plant dry matter). But photo-respiration also results in the formation of NH3 (ammonia nitrogen form) the plant can make amino acids with.

It (photo-respiration) also provides the 1 carbon units to make pyrimid-ines; these accept electrons during the dark keeping pH stable so that when it is light again there is a smooth transiton of pH alteration when electrons get taken from water splitting step of photosynthesis. As a consequence of water splitting electron shunting there is also a shunting of H+ protons; these protons build up to drive ATP synthesis in plants (plants also create ATP via mitochondria).

The molecule (glycine) that photo-respiration makes some “wasted” CO2 from also is used to make serine. Serine (& glycine) are chlorophyll precursors, among other other things (ex: glutathione, ethanolamine, tryptophan, phospha-tidyl-choline).

What the O.P. said was they were able to save ~ 30 % of the plant’s energy (calculated in calories) by avoiding the “glitch” (photo-respiration). This is distinct from the 20-30% carbon mass lost as CO2 (which is related to dry matter, calculated by weight). In simple terms the 30% loss of total plant energy occurs when photo-respiration runs it’s cycles related to nitrogen & carbon.

C3 plants are not doing “junk”, but are utilizing the “glitch” for some purposes. There is a trade off (carbon lost to make maximum dry matter yield) from our human perspective because we covet bio-mass, but C3 plants grow & reproduce taking advantage of the “glitch”.

meiggs
February 18, 2019 4:02 pm

Constant improvement got us where we are now….

Chris Norman
February 18, 2019 6:39 pm

The world will be in full blown Maunder Minimum by then. Be grateful you don’t see the results of that.

February 19, 2019 3:03 am

Yes a possible colder world is the worst situation. More clouds, a shorter growing season.

So some research for such colder conditions . Perhaps such research should be in both Canada and Russia.

MJE

Jim
February 19, 2019 3:54 am

If a 40% increase in food production leads to a 40% increase in population, we won’t be saving the world, we will be destroying it.

2hotel9
Reply to  Jim
February 19, 2019 6:43 am

Yep, humans evil. We get it.

Tom Schaefer
February 19, 2019 4:50 am

“And I wish I would be around to see how much greener the planet would become.” Hi probably will be! mfoundation.org