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Featured researches published by Hengfu Yin.


New Phytologist | 2015

A roadmap for research on crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) to enhance sustainable food and bioenergy production in a hotter, drier world

Xiaohan Yang; John C. Cushman; Anne M. Borland; Erika J. Edwards; Stan D. Wullschleger; Gerald A. Tuskan; Nick A. Owen; Howard Griffiths; J. Andrew C. Smith; Henrique Cestari De Paoli; David J. Weston; Robert W. Cottingham; James Hartwell; Sarah C. Davis; Katia Silvera; Ray Ming; Karen Schlauch; Paul E. Abraham; J. Ryan Stewart; Hao Bo Guo; Rebecca L. Albion; Jungmin Ha; Sung Don Lim; Bernard Wone; Won Cheol Yim; Travis Garcia; Jesse A. Mayer; Juli Petereit; Sujithkumar Surendran Nair; Erin Casey

Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) is a specialized mode of photosynthesis that features nocturnal CO2 uptake, facilitates increased water-use efficiency (WUE), and enables CAM plants to inhabit water-limited environments such as semi-arid deserts or seasonally dry forests. Human population growth and global climate change now present challenges for agricultural production systems to increase food, feed, forage, fiber, and fuel production. One approach to meet these challenges is to increase reliance on CAM crops, such as Agave and Opuntia, for biomass production on semi-arid, abandoned, marginal, or degraded agricultural lands. Major research efforts are now underway to assess the productivity of CAM crop species and to harness the WUE of CAM by engineering this pathway into existing food, feed, and bioenergy crops. An improved understanding of CAM has potential for high returns on research investment. To exploit the potential of CAM crops and CAM bioengineering, it will be necessary to elucidate the evolution, genomic features, and regulatory mechanisms of CAM. Field trials and predictive models will be required to assess the productivity of CAM crops, while new synthetic biology approaches need to be developed for CAM engineering. Infrastructure will be needed for CAM model systems, field trials, mutant collections, and data management.


Nature plants | 2016

Transcript, protein and metabolite temporal dynamics in the CAM plant Agave

Paul E. Abraham; Hengfu Yin; Anne M. Borland; Deborah A. Weighill; Sung Don Lim; Henrique Cestari De Paoli; Nancy L. Engle; Piet C. Jones; Ryan Agh; David J. Weston; Stan D. Wullschleger; Timothy J. Tschaplinski; Dan Jacobson; John C. Cushman; Robert L. Hettich; Gerald A. Tuskan; Xiaohan Yang

Already a proven mechanism for drought resilience, crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) is a specialized type of photosynthesis that maximizes water-use efficiency by means of an inverse (compared to C3 and C4 photosynthesis) day/night pattern of stomatal closure/opening to shift CO2 uptake to the night, when evapotranspiration rates are low. A systems-level understanding of temporal molecular and metabolic controls is needed to define the cellular behaviour underpinning CAM. Here, we report high-resolution temporal behaviours of transcript, protein and metabolite abundances across a CAM diel cycle and, where applicable, compare the observations to the well-established C3 model plant Arabidopsis. A mechanistic finding that emerged is that CAM operates with a diel redox poise that is shifted relative to that in Arabidopsis. Moreover, we identify widespread rescheduled expression of genes associated with signal transduction mechanisms that regulate stomatal opening/closing. Controlled production and degradation of transcripts and proteins represents a timing mechanism by which to regulate cellular function, yet knowledge of how this molecular timekeeping regulates CAM is unknown. Here, we provide new insights into complex post-transcriptional and -translational hierarchies that govern CAM in Agave. These data sets provide a resource to inform efforts to engineer more efficient CAM traits into economically valuable C3 crops.


Critical Reviews in Plant Sciences | 2014

Functional genomics of drought tolerance in bioenergy crops.

Hengfu Yin; Chun Ju Chen; Jun Yang; David J. Weston; Jin-Gui Chen; Wellington Muchero; Ning Ye; Timothy J. Tschaplinski; Stan D. Wullschleger; Zong-Ming Cheng; Gerald A. Tuskan; Xiaohan Yang

With predicted global changes in temperature and precipitation, drought will increasingly impose a challenge to biomass production. Most of the bioenergy crops have some degree of drought susceptibility as revealed for example through measures of low water-use efficiency (WUE). It is imperative to improve drought tolerance and WUE in bioenergy crops for sustainable biomass production in arid and semi-arid regions. Genetics and functional genomics can play critical roles in generating knowledge to inform and aid genetic improvement for drought tolerance in bioenergy crops. The molecular aspects of drought response have been extensively investigated in model plants like Arabidopsis, yet our understanding of the molecular mechanisms underlying drought tolerance in bioenergy crops is limited. Plants in general exhibit various responses to drought stress depending on species and genotype. A rational strategy for studying drought tolerance in bioenergy crops is to translate the knowledge from model plants relative to the unique features associated with individual bioenergy species and genotypes. In this review, we summarize the general knowledge concerning drought responsive pathways, with a focus on the identification of commonality and specialty in drought responsive mechanisms among alternate species and genotypes. We describe the genomic resources developed for bioenergy crops and discuss genetic and epigenetic regulation of drought responses. We also examine comparative and evolutionary genomics as a means to leverage the ever-increasing genomics resources and provide new insights beyond what is known from studies on individual species. Finally, we outline future opportunities for studying drought tolerance using the emerging technologies.


Nature Communications | 2017

The Kalanchoë genome provides insights into convergent evolution and building blocks of crassulacean acid metabolism

Xiaohan Yang; Rongbin Hu; Hengfu Yin; Jerry Jenkins; Shengqiang Shu; Haibao Tang; Degao Liu; Deborah A. Weighill; Won Cheol Yim; Jungmin Ha; Karolina Heyduk; David Goodstein; Hao Bo Guo; Robert C. Moseley; Elisabeth Fitzek; Sara Jawdy; Zhihao Zhang; Meng Xie; James Hartwell; Jane Grimwood; Paul E. Abraham; Ritesh Mewalal; Juan D. Beltrán; Susanna F. Boxall; Louisa V. Dever; Kaitlin J. Palla; Rebecca L. Albion; Travis Garcia; Jesse A. Mayer; Sung Don Lim

Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) is a water-use efficient adaptation of photosynthesis that has evolved independently many times in diverse lineages of flowering plants. We hypothesize that convergent evolution of protein sequence and temporal gene expression underpins the independent emergences of CAM from C3 photosynthesis. To test this hypothesis, we generate a de novo genome assembly and genome-wide transcript expression data for Kalanchoë fedtschenkoi, an obligate CAM species within the core eudicots with a relatively small genome (~260 Mb). Our comparative analyses identify signatures of convergence in protein sequence and re-scheduling of diel transcript expression of genes involved in nocturnal CO2 fixation, stomatal movement, heat tolerance, circadian clock, and carbohydrate metabolism in K. fedtschenkoi and other CAM species in comparison with non-CAM species. These findings provide new insights into molecular convergence and building blocks of CAM and will facilitate CAM-into-C3 photosynthesis engineering to enhance water-use efficiency in crops.Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) is a metabolic adaptation of photosynthesis that enhances water use efficiency. Here, via genomic analysis of Kalanchoë, the authors provide evidence for convergent evolution of protein sequence and temporal gene expression underpinning the multiple independent emergences of CAM.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Populus trichocarpa encodes small, effector-like secreted proteins that are highly induced during mutualistic symbiosis

Jonathan M. Plett; Hengfu Yin; Ritesh Mewalal; Rongbin Hu; Ting Li; Priya Ranjan; Sara Jawdy; Henrique Cestari De Paoli; George A. Butler; Tessa M. Burch-Smith; Hao Bo Guo; Chun Ju Chen; Annegret Kohler; Ian C. Anderson; Jessy Labbé; Francis Martin; Gerald A. Tuskan; Xiaohan Yang

During symbiosis, organisms use a range of metabolic and protein-based signals to communicate. Of these protein signals, one class is defined as ‘effectors’, i.e., small secreted proteins (SSPs) that cause phenotypical and physiological changes in another organism. To date, protein-based effectors have been described in aphids, nematodes, fungi and bacteria. Using RNA sequencing of Populus trichocarpa roots in mutualistic symbiosis with the ectomycorrhizal fungus Laccaria bicolor, we sought to determine if host plants also contain genes encoding effector-like proteins. We identified 417 plant-encoded putative SSPs that were significantly regulated during this interaction, including 161 SSPs specific to P. trichocarpa and 15 SSPs exhibiting expansion in Populus and closely related lineages. We demonstrate that a subset of these SSPs can enter L. bicolor hyphae, localize to the nucleus and affect hyphal growth and morphology. We conclude that plants encode proteins that appear to function as effector proteins that may regulate symbiotic associations.


BMC Genomics | 2018

Diel rewiring and positive selection of ancient plant proteins enabled evolution of CAM photosynthesis in Agave

Hengfu Yin; Hao-Bo Guo; David J. Weston; Anne M. Borland; Priya Ranjan; Paul E. Abraham; Sara Jawdy; James M. Wachira; Gerald A. Tuskan; Timothy J. Tschaplinski; Stan D. Wullschleger; Hong Guo; Robert L. Hettich; Stephen M. Gross; Zhong Wang; Axel Visel; Xiaohan Yang

BackgroundCrassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) enhances plant water-use efficiency through an inverse day/night pattern of stomatal closure/opening that facilitates nocturnal CO2 uptake. CAM has evolved independently in over 35 plant lineages, accounting for ~ 6% of all higher plants. Agave species are highly heat- and drought-tolerant, and have been domesticated as model CAM crops for beverage, fiber, and biofuel production in semi-arid and arid regions. However, the genomic basis of evolutionary innovation of CAM in genus Agave is largely unknown.ResultsUsing an approach that integrated genomics, gene co-expression networks, comparative genomics and protein structure analyses, we investigated the molecular evolution of CAM as exemplified in Agave. Comparative genomics analyses among C3, C4 and CAM species revealed that core metabolic components required for CAM have ancient genomic origins traceable to non-vascular plants while regulatory proteins required for diel re-programming of metabolism have a more recent origin shared among C3, C4 and CAM species. We showed that accelerated evolution of key functional domains in proteins responsible for primary metabolism and signaling, together with a diel re-programming of the transcription of genes involved in carbon fixation, carbohydrate processing, redox homeostasis, and circadian control is required for the evolution of CAM in Agave. Furthermore, we highlighted the potential candidates contributing to the adaptation of CAM functional modules.ConclusionsThis work provides evidence of adaptive evolution of CAM related pathways. We showed that the core metabolic components required for CAM are shared by non-vascular plants, but regulatory proteins involved in re-reprogramming of carbon fixation and metabolite transportation appeared more recently. We propose that the accelerated evolution of key proteins together with a diel re-programming of gene expression were required for CAM evolution from C3 ancestors in Agave.


Biotechnology for Biofuels | 2015

Development of Agave as a dedicated biomass source: production of biofuels from whole plants

Jonathan R. Mielenz; Miguel Rodriguez; Olivia A. Thompson; Xiaohan Yang; Hengfu Yin


Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment | 2016

Mitigating climate change through managing constructed-microbial communities in agriculture

Cyd E. Hamilton; James D. Bever; Jessy Labbé; Xiaohan Yang; Hengfu Yin


Plant Journal | 2013

Evolutionary analyses of non-family genes in plants

Chu-Yu Ye; Ting Li; Hengfu Yin; David J. Weston; Gerald A. Tuskan; Timothy J. Tschaplinski; Xiaohan Yang


RGC7: 7th International Rosaceae Genomics Conference | 2014

Unique evolutionary pattern of NBS-LRR genes among five Rosaceae species

Yan Zhong; Hengfu Yin; D.J. Sargent; Malnoy; Zong-Ming Cheng

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Xiaohan Yang

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Gerald A. Tuskan

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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David J. Weston

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Paul E. Abraham

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Stan D. Wullschleger

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Hao Bo Guo

University of Tennessee

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Sara Jawdy

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Sung Don Lim

Kangwon National University

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