Abstract
BackgroundThe mission of the BioEnergy Science Center (BESC) was to enable efficient lignocellulosic-based biofuel production. One BESC goal was to decrease poplar and switchgrass biomass recalcitrance to biofuel conversion while not affecting plant growth. A transformation pipeline (TP), to express transgenes or transgene fragments (constructs) in these feedstocks with the goal of understanding and decreasing recalcitrance, was considered essential for this goal. Centralized data storage for access by BESC members and later the public also was essential.ResultsA BESC committee was established to codify procedures to evaluate and accept genes into the TP. A laboratory information management system (LIMS) was organized to catalog constructs, plant lines and results from their analyses. One hundred twenty-eight constructs were accepted into the TP for expression in switchgrass in the first 5 years of BESC. Here we provide information on 53 of these constructs and the BESC TP process. Eleven of the constructs could not be cloned into an expression vector for transformation. Of the remaining constructs, 22 modified expression of the gene target. Transgenic lines representing some constructs displayed decreased recalcitrance in the field and publications describing these results are tabulated here. Transcript levels of target genes and detailed wall analyses from transgenic lines expressing six additional tabulated constructs aimed toward modifying expression of genes associated with wall structure (xyloglucan and lignin components) are provided. Altered expression of xyloglucan endotransglucosylase/hydrolases did not modify lignin content in transgenic plants. Simultaneous silencing of two hydroxycinnamoyl CoA:shikimate hydroxycinnamoyl transferases was necessary to decrease G and S lignin monomer and total lignin contents, but this reduced plant growth.ConclusionsA TP to produce plants with decreased recalcitrance and a LIMS for data compilation from these plants were created. While many genes accepted into the TP resulted in transgenic switchgrass without modified lignin or biomass content, a group of genes with potential to improve lignocellulosic biofuel yields was identified. Results from transgenic lines targeting xyloglucan and lignin structure provide examples of the types of information available on switchgrass lines produced within BESC. This report supplies useful information when developing coordinated, large-scale, multi-institutional reverse genetic pipelines to improve crop traits.
Highlights
The mission of the BioEnergy Science Center (BESC) was to enable efficient lignocellulosic-based bio‐ fuel production
Switchgrass transformation pipeline From the start of BESC in October 2007 through 2012 [submission rounds 1–12 within the TP], 128 constructs representing 88 candidate genes were accepted into the reverse genetics program for transgenesis in switchgrass
The identity of some genes accepted into the TP and the data obtained from the subsequently produced transgenic switchgrass lines are not disclosed in this report because either (a) experiments are still being performed to characterize recalcitrance traits in these lines for commercial benefit or (b) results modifying specific transgene(s) are being incorporated into single- or multigene-centric reports with more detailed descriptions of outcomes than can be given here
Summary
The mission of the BioEnergy Science Center (BESC) was to enable efficient lignocellulosic-based bio‐ fuel production. One BESC goal was to decrease poplar and switchgrass biomass recalcitrance to biofuel conversion while not affecting plant growth. The BioEnergy Science Center (BESC) was one of the three Bioenergy Research Centers (BRCs) funded by the United States Department of Energy from October 2007 through September 2017. BESC focused on basic and translational research directed toward decreasing cellulosic biofuel production costs. A central strategy to accomplish this is through modification of plant cell walls for easier and cheaper access to sugar substrates (i.e. reduced recalcitrance [2]). Biomass recalcitrance is rooted in the difficulty of degrading plant cell walls for conversion into biofuel [3, 4]. BESC sought to decrease recalcitrance in switchgrass (Panicum virgatum L.) and Populus spp., as representatives of perennial grass and woody feedstocks
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