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    Home»Biology»Manipulating Cell Division Will Help Grow Trees Bigger and Faster
    Biology

    Manipulating Cell Division Will Help Grow Trees Bigger and Faster

    By University of ManchesterApril 16, 20151 Comment3 Mins Read
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    Wood Formation in Trees Is Increased by Manipulating PXY-Regulated Cell Division
    The researchers show that altering the expression of the poplar homologs of the receptor kinase PXY and its peptide ligand CLE41 results in increased cambial cell division in hybrid aspen. 2-fold increases in the rate of wood formation were observed, demonstrating that engineering PXY/CLE41 signaling offers a means to increase tree productivity. Credit: Etchells et al., 2015, Current Biology

    A newly published study details how to make trees grow bigger and faster, which could increase supplies of renewable resources and help trees cope with the effects of climate change.

    In the study, published in Current Biology, researchers from the University of Manchester successfully manipulated two genes in poplar trees in order to make them grow larger and more quickly than usual.

    Professor Simon Turner from the Faculty of Life Sciences led the research: “The rate at which trees grow is determined by the rate of cell division in the stem. We have identified two genes that are able to drive cell division in the stem and override the normal growth pattern.

    “Although this needs to be tested in the field, this discovery paves the way for generating trees that grow more quickly and so will contribute to meeting the needs for increased plant biomass as a renewable source of biofuels, chemicals, and materials while minimizing further CO2 release into the atmosphere.”

    The genes, called PXY and CLE, control the growth of a tree trunk. When overexpressed, making them more active than in their normal state, the trees grew twice as fast as normal and were taller, wider, and had more leaves.

    As well as the potential to increase biomass supplies for the growing biofuel and industrial biotechnology sectors, the discovery could help plants deal with the environmental consequences of climate change.

    Professor Turner adds: “Our work offers the possibility we may be able to maintain a fast growth rate even in the face of adverse and changeable environmental conditions that all plants are likely to be faced with.

    “Most plants, including crops, respond to adverse environmental conditions with lower growth rates that result in correspondingly lower yields. Understanding how the plants respond to environmental signals and to what extent we are able to manipulate them to override these signals is likely to be very important for continued improvements to crop performance. In the future, it may be possible that manipulating the expression of the PXY and CLE genes can override environmental signals that normally alter plant growth.

    “This is something that needs to be tested in the field, but offers a potential way forward for what is one of the most pressing challenges of the day.”

    The team now plans to work with a forest products company to test their findings in the field.

    The work builds on a previous study from 2010 in which the team identified the role of the genes involved, in the plant Arabidopsis.

    The study was funded by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council.

    Reference: “Wood Formation in Trees Is Increased by Manipulating PXY-Regulated Cell Division” by J. Peter Etchells, Laxmi S. Mishra, Manoj Kumar, Liam Campbell and Simon R. Turner, 9 August 2015, Current Biology.
    DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2015.02.023

     

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    1 Comment

    1. Peter Frederiks on June 25, 2017 3:48 pm

      “Bigger and faster”. Sounds like commerce.
      Maybe “Better and faster” should be the objective.

      Reply
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