Return of the Lemnaceae: duckweed as a model plant system in the genomics and postgenomics era

Author:

Acosta Kenneth1ORCID,Appenroth Klaus J2ORCID,Borisjuk Ljudmilla3ORCID,Edelman Marvin4ORCID,Heinig Uwe4ORCID,Jansen Marcel A K5ORCID,Oyama Tokitaka6ORCID,Pasaribu Buntora1ORCID,Schubert Ingo3ORCID,Sorrels Shawn1ORCID,Sree K Sowjanya7,Xu Shuqing8ORCID,Michael Todd P9ORCID,Lam Eric1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Plant Biology, Rutgers the State University of New Jersey, New Brunswick, NJ 08901, USA

2. Plant Physiology, Matthias Schleiden Institute, University of Jena, Jena 07737, Germany

3. The Leibniz Institute of Plant Genetics and Crop Plant Research, Gatersleben D-06466, Germany

4. Department of Plant and Environmental Sciences, Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot 7610001, Israel

5. School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences, Environmental Research Institute, University College Cork, Cork T23 TK30, Ireland

6. Department of Botany, Graduate School of Science, Kyoto University, Kyoto 606-8502, Japan

7. Department of Environmental Science, Central University of Kerala, Periye 671320, India

8. Institute for Evolution and Biodiversity, University of M�nster, M�nster 48149, Germany

9. Plant Molecular and Cellular Biology Laboratory, The Salk Institute of Biological Studies, La Jolla, California 92037, USA

Abstract

Abstract The aquatic Lemnaceae family, commonly called duckweed, comprises some of the smallest and fastest growing angiosperms known on Earth. Their tiny size, rapid growth by clonal propagation, and facile uptake of labeled compounds from the media were attractive features that made them a well-known model for plant biology from 1950 to 1990. Interest in duckweed has steadily regained momentum over the past decade, driven in part by the growing need to identify alternative plants from traditional agricultural crops that can help tackle urgent societal challenges, such as climate change and rapid population expansion. Propelled by rapid advances in genomic technologies, recent studies with duckweed again highlight the potential of these small plants to enable discoveries in diverse fields from ecology to chronobiology. Building on established community resources, duckweed is reemerging as a platform to study plant processes at the systems level and to translate knowledge gained for field deployment to address some of society’s pressing needs. This review details the anatomy, development, physiology, and molecular characteristics of the Lemnaceae to introduce them to the broader plant research community. We highlight recent research enabled by Lemnaceae to demonstrate how these plants can be used for quantitative studies of complex processes and for revealing potentially novel strategies in plant defense and genome maintenance.

Funder

Department of Energy

Hatch project

Multi-State Capacity project

New Jersey Agricultural Experiment Station at Rutgers University

German Science Foundation

University of M�nster

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cell Biology,Plant Science

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