Note: When clicking on a Digital Object Identifier (DOI) number, you will be taken to an external site maintained by the publisher.
                                            Some full text articles may not yet be available without a charge during the embargo (administrative interval).
                                        
                                        
                                        
                                            
                                                
                                             What is a DOI Number?
                                        
                                    
                                
Some links on this page may take you to non-federal websites. Their policies may differ from this site.
- 
            For millennia, humanity has depended on photosynthesis to cultivate crops and feed a growing population. However, the escalating challenges of climate change and global hunger now compel us to surpass the efficiency limitations of photosynthesis. Here, we propose the adoption of an electro-agriculture (electro-ag) framework that combines CO2 electrolysis with biological systems to enhance food production efficiency. Adopting a food system based entirely on electro-ag could reduce United States agricultural land use by 88%, freeing nearly half of the country’s land for ecosystem restoration and natural carbon sequestration. Electro-ag bypasses traditional photosynthesis, enabling food cultivation in non-arable urban centers, arid deserts, and even outer space environments. We offer a new strategy that improves energy efficiency by an order of magnitude compared with photosynthesis, along with essential guidance for developing electro-ag focused on staple crops, to maximize benefits for regions facing food insecurity. This innovative approach to agriculture holds significant promise in reducing environmental impacts, streamlining supply chains, and addressing the global food crisis.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available November 1, 2025
- 
            Abstract Maintenance of water homeostasis is a fundamental cellular process required by all living organisms. Here, we use the single-celled green algaChlamydomonas reinhardtiito establish a foundational understanding of osmotic-stress signaling pathways through transcriptomics, phosphoproteomics, and functional genomics approaches. Comparison of pathways identified through these analyses with yeast and Arabidopsis allows us to infer their evolutionary conservation and divergence across these lineages. 76 genes, acting across diverse cellular compartments, were found to be important for osmotic-stress tolerance in Chlamydomonas through their functions in cytoskeletal organization, potassium transport, vesicle trafficking, mitogen-activated protein kinase and chloroplast signaling. We show that homologs for five of these genes have conserved functions in stress tolerance in Arabidopsis and reveal a novel PROFILIN-dependent stage of acclimation affecting the actin cytoskeleton that ensures tissue integrity upon osmotic stress. This study highlights the conservation of the stress response in algae and land plants, and establishes Chlamydomonas as a unicellular plant model system to dissect the osmotic stress signaling pathway.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available December 1, 2025
- 
            Genetic approaches are limited in the dinoflagellate family, Symbiodiniaceae, causing a bottleneck in the discovery of useful mutants toward the goal of preventing future coral bleaching events. In this protocol, we demonstrate the application of UV exposure, coupled with downstream phenotypic screening and mutant isolation, to form a UV mutagenesis pipeline. This pipeline provides an avenue to generate Symbiodiniaceae mutants to help link genotype to phenotype, as well as address previously unanswered questions surrounding relationships with host organisms, like coral.more » « less
- 
            Chlorophyll c is a key photosynthetic pigment that has been used historically to classify eukaryotic algae. Despite its importance in global photosynthetic productivity, the pathway for its biosynthesis has remained elusive. Here we define the CHLOROPHYLL C SYNTHASE (CHLCS) discovered through investigation of a dinoflagellate mutant deficient in chlorophyll c. CHLCSs are proteins with chlorophyll a/b binding and 2-oxoglutarate-Fe(II) dioxygenase (2OGD) domains found in peridinin-containing dinoflagellates; other chlorophyll c-containing algae utilize enzymes with only the 2OGD domain or an unknown synthase to produce chlorophyll c. 2OGD-containing synthases across dinoflagellate, diatom, cryptophyte, and haptophyte lineages form a monophyletic group, 8 members of which were also shown to produce chlorophyll c. Chlorophyll c1 to c2 ratios in marine algae are dictated in part by chlorophyll c synthases. CHLCS heterologously expressed in planta results in the accumulation of chlorophyll c1 and c2, demonstrating a path to augment plant pigment composition with algal counterparts.more » « less
- 
            Alternative carbon sources for the production of plant cellular agriculture: a case study on acetatePlant cellular agriculture aims to disrupt the way plant derived products are produced. Plant cell cultures are typically grown with sucrose as the primary carbon and energy source, but alternative carbon sources may have advantages over sucrose including less strain on food systems, lower costs, and more sustainable sourcing. Here we review carbon and energy sources that may serve as alternatives to sucrose in the cultivation of plant cell cultures. We identified acetate as a promising candidate and took the first steps to evaluate its potential for use in growing tobacco plant cell cultures. When added to media containing sucrose, acetate concentrations above 8 mM completely inhibit growth. Lower concentrations of acetate (2-4 mM) can support an increase in dry weight without sucrose but do not provide enough energy for substantial growth.13C labeling indicates that tobacco plant cell cultures can incorporate carbon from exogenous acetate into proteins and carbohydrates. Analysis of transcriptome data showed that genes encoding glyoxylate cycle enzymes are expressed at very low levels compared to genes from the TCA cycle and glycolysis. Adaptive laboratory evolution experiments were able to increase tobacco cell cultures tolerance to acetate, demonstrating the potential for this type of approach going forward. Overall, our results indicate that acetate can be metabolized by plant cell cultures and suggest that further adaptive laboratory evolution or strain engineering efforts may enable acetate to serve as a sole carbon and energy source for tobacco plant cell cultures. This assessment of acetate provides a framework for evaluating other carbon and energy sources for plant cell cultures, efforts that will help reduce the costs and environmental impact, and increase the commercial potential of plant cellular agriculture.more » « less
- 
            Chloroplast are sites of photosynthesis that have been bioengineered to produce food, biopharmaceuticals, and biomaterials. Current approaches for altering the chloroplast genome rely on inefficient DNA delivery methods, leading to low chloroplast transformation efficiency rates. For algal chloroplasts, there is no modifiable, customizable, and efficient in situ DNA delivery chassis. Herein, we investigated polyethylenimine-coated single-walled carbon nanotubes (PEI-SWCNT) as delivery vehicles for DNA to algal chloroplasts. We examined the impact of PEI-SWCNT charge and PEI polymer size (25k vs 10k) on the uptake into chloroplasts of wildtype and cell wall knockout mutant strains of the green algae Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. To assess the delivery of DNA bound to PEI-SWCNT, we used confocal microscopy and colocalization analysis of chloroplast autofluorescence with fluorophore-labeled single-stranded GT15 DNA. We found that highly charged DNA-PEI25k-SWNCT have a statistically significant higher percentage of DNA colocalization events with algal chloroplasts (22.28% ± 6.42, 1 hr) over 1-3 hours than DNA-PEI10k-SWNCT (7.23% ± 0.68, 1 hr) (P<0.01). We determined the biocompatibility of DNA-PEI-SWCNT through assays for living algae cells, reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation, and in vivo chlorophyll assays. Through these assays, it was shown that algae exposed to DNA-PEI25k-SWCNT (30 fg/cell) and DNA-PEI10k-SWCNT (300 fg/cell) were viable over 4 days and had little impact on oxidative stress levels. DNA coated PEI-SWCNT transiently increased ROS levels within one hour of exposure to nanomaterials (30- 300 fg/cell) both in the wildtype strain and cell-wall knockout strain, followed by ROS decline to normal levels due to reaction with antioxidant glutathione and lipid membranes. PEI-SWCNT can act as biological carriers for delivering biomolecules such as DNA and have the potential to become novel tools for chloroplast biotechnology and synthetic biology.more » « less
- 
            The breakdown of symbiotic mutualism between cnidarian hosts and dinoflagellate algae partners (i.e., bleaching) has been linked to an immune-like response pathway brought on by a nitro-oxidative burst, a symptom of thermal stress. Stress induced by reactive oxygen species (ROS)/reactive nitrogen species is a problem common to aerobic systems. In this study, we tested the antioxidant effects of engineered poly(acrylic acid)-coated cerium dioxide nanoparticles (CeO 2 , nanoceria) on free-living Symbiodiniaceae ( Breviolum minutum ), a dinoflagellate alga that forms symbiotic relationships with reef-building corals and anemones. Results show that poly(acrylic acid)-coated CeO 2 with hydrodynamic diameters of ~4 nm are internalized by B. minutum in under 30 min and subsequently localized in the cytosol. Nanoceria exposure does not inhibit cell growth over time, with the treated cultures showing a similar growth trend over the 25-day exposure. Aerobic activity and thermal stress when held at 34°C for 1 h (+6°C above control) led to increased intracellular ROS concentration with time. A clear ROS scavenging effect of the nanoceria was observed, with a 5-fold decrease in intracellular ROS levels during thermal stress. The nitric oxide (NO) concentration decreased by ~17% with thermal stress, suggesting the rapid involvement of NO scavenging enzymes or proteins within 1 h of stress onset. The presence of nanoceria did not appear to influence NO concentration. Furthermore, aposymbiotic anemones ( Exaiptasia diaphana , ex Aiptasia pallida ) were successfully infected with nanoceria-loaded B. minutum , demonstrating that inoculation could serve as a delivery method. The ability of nanoceria to be taken up by Symbiodiniaceae and reduce ROS production could be leveraged as a potential mitigation strategy to reduce coral bleaching.more » « less
- 
            Abstract Artificial photosynthesis systems are proposed as an efficient alternative route to capture CO 2 to produce additional food for growing global demand. Here a two-step CO 2 electrolyser system was developed to produce a highly concentrated acetate stream with a 57% carbon selectivity (CO 2 to acetate), allowing its direct use for the heterotrophic cultivation of yeast, mushroom-producing fungus and a photosynthetic green alga, in the dark without inputs from biological photosynthesis. An evaluation of nine crop plants found that carbon from exogenously supplied acetate incorporates into biomass through major metabolic pathways. Coupling this approach to existing photovoltaic systems could increase solar-to-food energy conversion efficiency by about fourfold over biological photosynthesis, reducing the solar footprint required. This technology allows for a reimagination of how food can be produced in controlled environments.more » « less
- 
            Photosynthetic organisms are sources of sustainable foods, renewable biofuels, novel biopharmaceuticals, and next-generation biomaterials essential for modern society. Efforts to improve the yield, variety, and sustainability of products dependent on chloroplasts are limited by the need for biotechnological approaches for high-throughput chloroplast transformation, monitoring chloroplast function, and engineering photosynthesis across diverse plant species. The use of nanotechnology has emerged as a novel approach to overcome some of these limitations. Nanotechnology is enabling advances in the targeted delivery of chemicals and genetic elements to chloroplasts, nanosensors for chloroplast biomolecules, and nanotherapeutics for enhancing chloroplast performance. Nanotechnology-mediated delivery of DNA to the chloroplast has the potential to revolutionize chloroplast synthetic biology by allowing transgenes, or even synthesized DNA libraries, to be delivered to a variety of photosynthetic species. Crop yield improvements could be enabled by nanomaterials that enhance photosynthesis, increase tolerance to stresses, and act as nanosensors for biomolecules associated with chloroplast function. Engineering isolated chloroplasts through nanotechnology and synthetic biology approaches are leading to a new generation of plant-based biomaterials able to self-repair using abundant CO 2 and water sources and are powered by renewable sunlight energy. Current knowledge gaps of nanotechnology-enabled approaches for chloroplast biotechnology include precise mechanisms for entry into plant cells and organelles, limited understanding about nanoparticle-based chloroplast transformations, and the translation of lab-based nanotechnology tools to the agricultural field with crop plants. Future research in chloroplast biotechnology mediated by the merging of synthetic biology and nanotechnology approaches can yield tools for precise control and monitoring of chloroplast function in vivo and ex vivo across diverse plant species, allowing increased plant productivity and turning plants into widely available sustainable technologies.more » « less
 An official website of the United States government
An official website of the United States government 
				
			 
					 
					
