Author:
Billakurthi Kumari,Hibberd Julian M.
Abstract
Abstract
Background
It has been proposed that engineering the C4 photosynthetic pathway into C3 crops could significantly increase yield. This goal requires an increase in the chloroplast compartment of bundle sheath cells in C3 species. To facilitate large-scale testing of candidate regulators of chloroplast development in the rice bundle sheath, a simple and robust method to phenotype this tissue in C3 species is required.
Results
We established a leaf ablation method to accelerate phenotyping of rice bundle sheath cells. The bundle sheath cells and chloroplasts were visualized using light and confocal laser microscopy. Bundle sheath cell dimensions, chloroplast area and chloroplast number per cell were measured from the images obtained by confocal laser microscopy. Bundle sheath cell dimensions of maize were also measured and compared with rice. Our data show that bundle sheath width but not length significantly differed between C3 rice and C4 maize. Comparison of paradermal versus transverse bundle sheath cell width indicated that bundle sheath cells were intact after leaf ablation. Moreover, comparisons of planar chloroplast areas and chloroplast numbers per bundle sheath cell between wild-type and transgenic rice lines expressing the maize GOLDEN-2 (ZmG2) showed that the leaf ablation method allowed differences in chloroplast parameters to be detected.
Conclusions
Leaf ablation is a simple approach to accessing bundle sheath cell files in C3 species. We show that this method is suitable for obtaining parameters associated with bundle sheath cell size, chloroplast area and chloroplast number per cell.
Funder
This research was funded by a C4 Rice Project grant from The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to the University of Oxford.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Plant Science,Genetics,Biotechnology
Reference39 articles.
1. Calvin M, Benson AA. The path of Carbon in Photosynthesis. Science. 1948;107:476–80.
2. Benson AA, Calvin M. Carbon dioxide fixation by green plants. Annu Rev Plant physiol. 1950;1:25–42.
3. Edwards GE, Walker DA. C3, C4:mechanisms, and cellular and environmental regulation, of photosynthesis. Oxford, UK: Blackwell Sci; 1983.
4. Ehleringer JR, Sage RF, Flanagan LB, Pearcy RW. Climate change and the evolution of C4 photosynthesis. Trends in Ecology and Evolution. 1991;6:95–9.
5. Borland AM, Zambrano VAB, Ceusters J, Shorrock K, Zambrano VAB, Ceusters J, et al. The photosynthetic plasticity of crassulacean acid metabolism: an evolutionary innovation for sustainable productivity in a changing world. New Phytol. 2011;191:619–33.