Why cutting respiratory CO2 loss from crops is possible, practicable, and prudential

J. Joshi, J. Amthor, D. McCarty, C. Messina, M. Wilson, A. Millar, A. Hanson
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

Plants release back to the atmosphere about half of the CO2 they capture by photosynthesis. Decreasing the rate of crop respiration could therefore potentially increase yields, store more carbon in the soil and draw down atmospheric CO2. However, decreasing respiration rate has had very little research effort compared to increasing photosynthesis, the historically dominant metabolic paradigm for crop improvement. Conceptual and technical advances, particularly in protein turnover and directed enzyme evolution, have now opened ways to trim the large fraction of respiration that fuels proteome maintenance by lowering the breakdown and resynthesis rates of enzymes and other proteins. In addition to being theoretically possible and practicable, exploring the reduction of respiration is prudential, given that it (i) has barely yet been tried and (ii) could help meet the challenges of sustaining crop productivity and managing atmospheric carbon.
为什么减少农作物的呼吸二氧化碳损失是可能的、可行的和审慎的
植物通过光合作用将它们捕获的二氧化碳的一半释放回大气。因此,降低作物呼吸速率可能会潜在地增加产量,在土壤中储存更多的碳,并减少大气中的二氧化碳。然而,与增加光合作用相比,降低呼吸速率的研究很少,光合作用是作物改良的主要代谢模式。概念和技术的进步,特别是在蛋白质转换和定向酶进化方面,现在已经开辟了通过降低酶和其他蛋白质的分解和再合成率来削减大部分促进蛋白质组维持的呼吸作用的方法。除了理论上可行和切实可行之外,探索减少呼吸作用是谨慎的,因为它(1)几乎没有尝试过,(2)可以帮助应对维持作物生产力和管理大气碳的挑战。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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