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First published online October 26, 2007; 10.1105/tpc.107.191040 The Plant Cell 19:2971-2973 (2007) © 2007 American Society of Plant Biologists
Translational Genomics for Bioenergy Production: There's Room for More Than One Model
Department of Biology
Department of Bioagricultural Sciences dbush{at}colostate.edu
Lawrence and Walbot's commentary (Lawrence and Walbot, 2007
To fully appreciate the value of other models, it is important to consider the traits that must be enhanced in new energy crops if they are to achieve the goals of 30% liquid fuel contribution by 2030 (U.S. DOE, 2006
In addition to enabling agronomic traits, many argue that new energy crops must focus on cell wall production since the bulk of photosynthetic free energy is found in the polymers of this complex matrix (U.S. DOE, 2006 Lawrence and Walbot argue that maize should be a primary model for new energy crops because it is a C4 grass, it is more closely related to candidate perennial grasses (Miscanthus and switchgrass) than other grass models, it has a rich stock of genetic and genomic tools, its genome will be completed in late 2008, and a community of experienced agronomists and researchers already exists. Taken together, these are good arguments for using maize as one model system for new energy crops.
Other grasses also have many desirable characteristics as model systems for new energy crops. In particular, rice is a powerful additional primary model for identifying desirable genes relevant to new energy crops because, along with its tremendous history of improvement and cultivation, it has a deep pool of genetic and genomic resources (Leung et al., 2007
Rice genomic tools have moved well beyond the initial genome sequence report in 2002 cited by Lawrence and Walbot. A high-quality, finished sequence of the japonica subspecies (var Nipponbare) (International Rice Genome Sequencing Project, 2005 Together, these extraordinary resources for identifying genes linked to the molecular mechanisms that underlie key agronomic and value-added traits and the ease with which they can be manipulated and studied in rice argue for rice as another useful model for the new energy crops. The power of exploiting natural biodiversity in rice in combination with genomic tools lies in the fact that the same genes can then be examined, and manipulated, in other grasses that are being developed as energy crops. Many of these resources are not available for maize at this time, and it would take many years to develop comparable tools from scratch in grass species currently discussed as energy crops (e.g., switchgrass and Miscanthus). Although rice is not as closely related to switchgrass and Miscanthus as is maize, the high degree of synteny in the grasses suggests there will be little problem translating genomic results from rice to homologous genes in the new energy crops.
Finally, rice is grown in many developing countries and is the primary source of calories for The take-home message of these brief remarks is that maize and rice are both excellent model species that should be exploited in our drive to develop new energy crops. If we are to advance this field as quickly as possible, we cannot afford to put all our eggs in one basket of discovery. Footnotes www.plantcell.org/cgi/doi/10.1105/tpc.107.191040 REFERENCES Dean, R.A., et al. (2005). The genome sequence of the rice blast fungus Magnaporthe grisea. Nature 434: 980–986.[CrossRef][Medline] Gowda, M., Jantasuriyarat, C., Dean, R.A., and Wang, G.L. (2004). Robust-LongSAGE (RL-SAGE): A substantially improved LongSAGE method for gene discovery and transcriptome analysis. Plant Physiol. 134: 890–897. Hirochika, H., Guiderdoni, E., An, G., Hsing, Y.I., Eun, M.Y., Han, C.D., Upadhyaya, N., Ramachandran, S., Zhang, Q., Pereira, A., Sundaresan, V., and Leung, H. (2004). 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