Researchers make discovery in mechanics of phototropism - could improve crop biomass yields
In a paper published in the Journal of Biological Chemistry, scientists at the University of Missouri-Columbia report molecular-level discoveries [*abstract] about the mechanisms of phototropism, the directional growth of plants toward or away from light.
Phototropism is initiated when photoreceptors in a plant sense directional blue light. Understanding phototropism is important because it could lead to crop improvement, says Mannie Liscum, professor in the Division of Biological Sciences in MU's College of Arts and Science and Christopher S. Bond Life Sciences Center.
biofuels :: energy :: sustainability :: molecular biology :: phototropism :: photosynthesis :: biotechnology :: biomass :: energy crops ::
These results suggest that the absorption of light by phot1, the dominant receptor controlling phototropism, leads to NPH3's loss of a phosphate group, allowing further progression of phototropic signaling.
"We found that exposure to directional blue light stimulated NPH3's dephosphorylation," Liscum said. "NPH3 exists as a phosphorylated protein in darkness and is rapidly dephosphorylated by a yet unidentified protein phosphatase in response to phot1 photoactivation by blue light."
Liscum and Pedmale now plan to study which amino acids on NPH3 are reversibly phosporylated and how NPH3 is involved in regulating other processes within plants.
The photosynthetic efficiency of crops, partly guided by their photoropic mechanisms, is currently below 0.4 per cent. The theoretical maximum efficiency however is around 4 per cent. Scientists and biotechnologists think it may be possible in the future to directly intervene in this complex natural mechanism, to improve the efficiency of the process and thus enhance plant growth by an order of magnitude.
Video: Blue-light-induced Phototropism. This short movie shows the phototropic response of dark-grown Arabidopsis seedlings. 60 hours after germination, blue light was provided from the left side for around 5 hours. The movies show the amount of phototropic curvature over a 5 hour period (Images were captured every 10 min and are played back at 6 frames per sec.) Source: Plants in Motion, tropisms.
References:
Ullas V. Pedmale and Emmanuel Liscum, "Regulation of Phototropic Signaling in Arabidopsis via Phosphorylation State Changes in the Phototropin 1-interacting Protein NPH3", J. Biol. Chem., Vol. 282, Issue 27, 19992-20001, July 6, 2007, doi:10.1074/jbc.M702551200
University of Missouri-Columbia: "MU Researchers Make Discovery in Molecular Mechanics of Phototropism" - July 5, 2007.
Phototropism is initiated when photoreceptors in a plant sense directional blue light. Understanding phototropism is important because it could lead to crop improvement, says Mannie Liscum, professor in the Division of Biological Sciences in MU's College of Arts and Science and Christopher S. Bond Life Sciences Center.
By understanding how phototropism works at a molecular level, we can work toward engineering plants that produce more biomass or have increased drought tolerance, among other things. For example, we could use this information to optimize plants' ability to capture light for photosynthesis, which would result in more energy capture and thus growth, or potentially agronomically useful biomass. - Mannie Liscum, professor of Biological Sciences, University of Missouri-ColumbiaLiscum and doctoral student Ullas Pedmale studied the regulation of phototropic signaling in Arabidopsis thaliana, a weedy flowering plant commonly used as a model in laboratory studies. Focusing on non-phototropic hypocotyls 3 (NPH3), a protein known to be essential for phototropic responses, they examined its phosphorylation, the addition or removal of a phosphate group to the protein molecule. Using a series of pharmacological treatments and immunoblot assays, the team discovered that NPH3 was a phosphorylated protein - a protein with a phosphate group attached - in seedlings grown in the darkness. When the seedlings were exposed to light, they became dephosphorylated, or lost their phosphate group:
biofuels :: energy :: sustainability :: molecular biology :: phototropism :: photosynthesis :: biotechnology :: biomass :: energy crops ::
These results suggest that the absorption of light by phot1, the dominant receptor controlling phototropism, leads to NPH3's loss of a phosphate group, allowing further progression of phototropic signaling.
"We found that exposure to directional blue light stimulated NPH3's dephosphorylation," Liscum said. "NPH3 exists as a phosphorylated protein in darkness and is rapidly dephosphorylated by a yet unidentified protein phosphatase in response to phot1 photoactivation by blue light."
Liscum and Pedmale now plan to study which amino acids on NPH3 are reversibly phosporylated and how NPH3 is involved in regulating other processes within plants.
The photosynthetic efficiency of crops, partly guided by their photoropic mechanisms, is currently below 0.4 per cent. The theoretical maximum efficiency however is around 4 per cent. Scientists and biotechnologists think it may be possible in the future to directly intervene in this complex natural mechanism, to improve the efficiency of the process and thus enhance plant growth by an order of magnitude.
Video: Blue-light-induced Phototropism. This short movie shows the phototropic response of dark-grown Arabidopsis seedlings. 60 hours after germination, blue light was provided from the left side for around 5 hours. The movies show the amount of phototropic curvature over a 5 hour period (Images were captured every 10 min and are played back at 6 frames per sec.) Source: Plants in Motion, tropisms.
References:
Ullas V. Pedmale and Emmanuel Liscum, "Regulation of Phototropic Signaling in Arabidopsis via Phosphorylation State Changes in the Phototropin 1-interacting Protein NPH3", J. Biol. Chem., Vol. 282, Issue 27, 19992-20001, July 6, 2007, doi:10.1074/jbc.M702551200
University of Missouri-Columbia: "MU Researchers Make Discovery in Molecular Mechanics of Phototropism" - July 5, 2007.
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