A colony growing in a culture dish. The leafy tissue is the dominant, haploid phase of the life cycle and the capsules can be seen as round 'footballs' all over the surface, at the tips of the leafy shoot
A colony growing in a culture dish. The leafy tissue is the dominant, haploid phase of the life cycle and the capsules can be seen as round 'footballs' all over the surface, at the tips of the leafy shoot. (c) University of Leeds
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Moss is a super model for feeding the hungry

Science Centric | 13 December 2007 21:44 GMT
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One of the simplest plants on the planet could help scientists create crops to survive the ravages of drought. The moss Physcomitrella patens is a primitive plant, similar to the first plants which began to grow on land around 450 million years ago. Just one cell thick, these early plants had to adapt to withstand cold, heat and drought without roots or complex leaves. The ability of mosses to survive severe dehydration and then re-grow when watered could be of enormous use in crops grown in drought-stricken areas of the developing world.

Scientists from the University of Leeds, with colleagues from Germany, Japan and the USA, have sequenced the genome for Physcomitrella - the first non-flowering or 'lower' plant to be sequenced - and their findings are published in the latest issue of the journal Science.

Now that they have sequenced the moss's DNA, scientists will be able to identify which genes control these survival tactics and adapt crops to do the same. The study of Physcomitrella was started at the University of Leeds over 20 years ago by Professor David Cove. Dr Andy Cuming has continued Professor Cove's work, supported by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council, and is part of the international team working on the genome.

'Physcomitrella is a really useful plant to study,' explains Dr Cuming. 'In addition to being the link between water-based algae and land plants, it also has many important characteristics which make it special. By sequencing the genome, we can start to identify their genetic basis and use the knowledge for crop improvement.'

Physcomitrella has a single 'haploid' genome - rather than a double genome from male and female parents - which makes it easier to identify which characteristics link to which gene. The moss is also able to integrate new DNA into a defined target in the genome - unlike most plants which integrate new DNA randomly. This means that modification of the moss genome is far more controlled than with other plants and allows the moss to be adapted as a 'green factory' to produce pharmaceutical products.

'If we can discover what mechanisms cause the Physcomitrella genome to integrate DNA in this way - we may be able to transfer those to other plants, to allow more controlled modification of their genomes,' said Dr Cuming. 'However, we also believe many of the useful genes in Physcomitrella are probably still present in 'higher' crop plants, but are no longer active in the same way. So rather than adding new DNA - we'll just be activating what's already there to create the properties we want.'

The sequencing has been carried out at the Joint Genome Institute in Berkeley, California, which invites scientists around the world to compete each year to use their sequencing facilities for a particular genome. Physcomitrella patens 'won' the competition in 2005. The work has been coordinated by the University of Leeds, the University of Freiburg in Germany, the National Institute for Basic Biology in Japan, Washington University at St Louis, Missouri and the University of California at Berkeley.

'Until now, only a handful of flowering plant genomes have been sequenced, compared with a large number of diverse animal genomes,' says Dr Cuming. 'But knowledge of a range of genomes is really important for scientific study. To help in understanding the human genome, scientists use the DNA of fruit flies, nematode worms and mice, to name only a few. We need that range in plant sciences too - and Physcomitrella patens is a fantastic one to add to the list.'

Source: University of Leeds


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