Differential expression of starch and sucrose metabolic genes linked to varying biomass yield in Miscanthus hybrids

Published: Aug. 5, 2020, 11:03 p.m.

Link to bioRxiv paper: http://biorxiv.org/cgi/content/short/2020.08.04.236885v1?rss=1 Authors: De Vega, J. J., Peel, N., Purdy, S. J., Hawkins, S., Donnison, I., Dyer, S., Farrar, K. Abstract: Miscanthus is a commercial lignocellulosic biomass crop owing to its high biomass productivity and low chemical input requirements. Interspecific Miscanthus hybrids with high biomass yield were shown to have low concentrations of starch and sucrose but high concentrations of fructose. We performed a transcriptional RNA-seq analysis between selected Miscanthus hybrids with contrasting values for these phenotypes to clarify how these phenotypes are genetically controlled. We observed that genes directly involved in the synthesis and degradation of starch and sucrose were down-regulated in high yielding Miscanthus hybrids. At the same time, glycolysis and export of triose phosphates were up-regulated in high yielding Miscanthus hybrids. Our results evidence a direct relationship between high expression of essential enzymatic genes in the starch and sucrose pathways, high starch concentrations, and lower biomass production. The strong interconnectivity between genotype, chemotype and agronomic traits opens the door to use the expression of well-characterised genes in the starch and sucrose pathway for the early selection of high biomass yielding genotypes from large Miscanthus populations. Copy rights belong to original authors. Visit the link for more info