A study published in Science Advances has revealed promising strategies to significantly improve crop yields by addressing photorespiration, a metabolic process that can reduce productivity by up to 36% in some crops. Researchers from the University of Groningen and Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf, working as part of the GAIN4CROPS project, have evaluated several alternative pathways that could help overcome this major agricultural bottleneck.
Photorespiration occurs when the enzyme RuBisCO, essential for photosynthesis, reacts with oxygen instead of carbon dioxide, resulting in substantial losses of fixed carbon and energy. This inefficiency costs the global agricultural sector billions in lost crop productivity annually.
"Our work shows that overcoming photorespiration through engineered pathways can provide a dual benefit: increasing carbon fixation while reducing energy losses," said Prof. Heinemann from the University of Groningen. "This has significant implications for the development of crops that are not only more productive but also better adapted to the changing climate and growing global food demands."
The study employed advanced mathematical models to analyze twelve alternative pathways designed to bypass or optimize photorespiration. The researchers classified these pathways based on their carbon-fixing abilities and identified which approaches offer the greatest potential improvements in different environmental conditions.