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Space-breeding and nuclear techniques to
improve Cassava as an energy crop
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The Spring issue of Universitas Helsingiensis
has a feature on how the latest biotech and
nuclear techniques are being used to
improve cassava, identified as a promising biofuel crop. The text is an abriged version
of a lecture delivered by S. Mohan Jain at the
Plenary Session of the 1st International
Conference on Cassava Breeding, organised by
Brazil's Ministry of the Environment and the
University of Brasilia (1–5 December 2006,
Brasilia, Brazil). The author works at the
Plant Breeding and Genetics division of the
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) and
was awarded a 2005 Nobel Peace Prize
certificate for his work as a member of staff
of the International Atomic Energy Agency, the
winner of the 2005 Nobel Peace Prize. Mohan
Jain outlines different breeding techniques -
from classic plant tissue culture and somatic
embryogenesis over innovative breeding
techniques in space to nuclear techniques for
inducing useful mutations - and indicates why
cassava makes for an ideal bioenergy
feedstock. Earlier we already referred to a
program by the U.S. Department of Energy's
Joint Genome Institute, where Norman Borlaug,
father of the 'Green Revolution' is sequencing
the crop's genome, in order to improve it with
an eye on bioenergy production ( earlier
post). Improved cassava is set to make vast
parts of the developing world prime biofuel
producers.
Detailed Report
A tropical root crop
Cassava (Manihot esculenta) is a perennial
root crop, cultivated all over the tropics for
its starchy tuberous roots as a valuable
source of calories, and is planted on about 16
million hectares of land. The crop adapts well
to a variety of soil and climatic conditions,
is drought tolerant and has the ability to be
grown on depleted and marginal soil.
The total annual cassava root production
worldwide is 184 million tonnes, out of which
50% production is in Africa, 30% in Asia and
20% in Latin America. The average yield varies
widely, e.g. 7–10 tonnes/ha in Ghana, which is
far below, for example, that of India (26
tonnes/ha) and Thailand (37 tonnes/ha). The
low yield in cassava-growing countries is due
to poor fertilisation, drought, severe
infection of the planting material (stem
cuttings) with African cassava mosaic virus (ACMV),
East African cassava mosaic virus (EACMV), and
the newly identified virus named South African
cassava mosaic virus (SACMV), diseases,
poor-quality cultivars and the short
shelf-life of tuber roots. Yields in these
regions can be substantially improved. Cassava
is an important source of carbohydrate in
adverse climatic conditions. The crop is
valued in many areas as a food staple.
In Accra, Ghana, the President launched the
President's Special Initiative (PSI) under
which the government will promote cassava
starch. The cassava project will create a
ready market for 25,000 farmers, and about
70,000 jobs would be created. In Nigeria, a
similar project is underway, also called the
Presidential Cassava Initiative (
earlier post).
In addition, the tuberous roots of cassava can
be left in the ground for several years prior
to harvesting, providing security against
famine. Cassava also has the highest rate of
CO2 assimilation into sucrose of any plant
measured, and has great potential for
enhancing carbohydrate allocation to sink
tissues. It is also increasingly being used in
processed food and fodder products and by the
chemical, pharmaceutical, paper and textile
industries.
Cassava nutrition
Cassava is poor in providing sufficient
nutrition to its consumers. The tubers are the
main source of carbohydrates (35%), and
provide a negligible amount of proteins. Fresh
leaves have a much higher amount of proteins
(7%) than tuber flesh ( 0.5–1.5%). Starch is
the main carbohydrate source in root tubers,
and is present in very low levels in fresh
leaves. Future efforts are needed to improve
cassava nutrition both in root tubers and
fresh leaves by using mutagenesis and the
latest biological tools, such as molecular
biology. The selection of appropriate genetic
material should be made from the natural and
induced germplasm for the development of new
cassava varieties high in nutritional values
so that malnutrition and related diseases,
e.g. Konzo, could be addressed. Konzo is a
neuro-logical disorder and leads to spastic
paralysis of the legs; and is attributed to
high levels of dietary cyanide in cassava.
Cassava as a biofuel crop
In Brazil, sugar cane is a major bioenergy
crop and has made this country a world leader
in bio-ethanol production. Cassava has the
potential to become another major bio-energy
crop together with sugar cane. It is an
attractive fuel crop because it can give high
yields of starch and total dry matter in spite
of drought conditions and poor soil. Energy
requirements of cassava represent only 5–6% of
the final energy content of the total biomass,
showing an energy profit of 95%, assuming
complete utilisation of the energy content of
the total biomass:
Alcohol production from cassava has an overall
efficiency of 32%. Cassava could become an
industrial crop by developing cultivars with
different starch compositions. Useful
variations in native starch quality – altering
the proportion of amylase to amylopectin, for
instance, which changes the physiochemical
properties of the polymer – could open new
market niches at better prices. Molecular
tools would be of great value in identifying
the genes responsible for starch synthesis.
Dr. Li's research group, Beijing, China, has
developed a new sweet sorghum mutant variety
Yuantian No. 1 by seed irradiation with gamma
radiation. This variety has 20% more sugar
than the parental lines and is an excellent
source both as a feed and as a bio-energy
crop, or a bio-ethanol producer.
In Thailand, a research group reported the
official release of a new Thai cassava
cultivar Rayong 9 with improved starch and
ethanol yields. This cultivar is a successful
plant type, producing good-quality stakes with
a high rate of germination, as well as a large
number of stakes from each plant. In Brazil, a
new class of cassava (Manihot esculenta Crantz)
has been identified and their storage roots
show unusual free sugar accumulation and novel
starch, and accumulate over 100 times more
free sugar (mainly glucose) than commercial
varieties.
A group in the USA suggested that
transportation biofuels such as synfuel
hydrocarbons or cellulosic ethanol, if
produced from low-input biomass grown on
agriculturally marginal land or from waste
biomass, could provide much greater supplies
and environmental benefits than food-based
biofuels. They found that ethanol, produced
from corn, yields 25% more energy than the
energy invested in its production, whereas
bio-diesel produced from soybeans, yields 93%
more. Cassava can grow under harsher climatic
conditions, and would be ideal for transport
biofuel.
Biotechnology
Plant tissue culture refers to the growing
and multiplication of cells, tissues and
organs of plants on defined solid or liquid
media under aseptic and controlled conditions.
The micro-propagation technique for rapid
shoot proliferation can be achieved from any
part of the plant such as the shoot tip, tiny
stem cuttings, roots, and auxiliary buds.
Normally, commercial companies use
micro-propagation extensively in large-scale
plant multiplication. However, the high cost
of in vitro plant production, the low volumes
produced, the degree of labour intensiveness,
and tissue-culture-derived plant variations
all hinder the rise in profits of commercial
enterprises, and therefore it is highly
desirable to modify the techniques to overcome
these problems for the supply of high-quality
planting material to small and large
commercial cassava growers.
Somatic embryogenesis
Somatic embryogenesis is an ideal
technique for the clonal propagation of woody
and fruit plants and genetic gain can now be
achieved through it. The formation of somatic
embryos from somatic cells by a process
resembling zygotic embryogenesis is one of the
most useful features of plants and offers a
potentially large-scale propagation system for
superior clones. Normally, the initiation of
embryogenic cultures is done by culturing
immature zygotic embryos, sometimes with
mature zygotic embryos, and offshoots. The
maintenance of embryogenic cultures is
critical for preventing tissue-culture-derived
variation. Also, it is critical to
cryopreserve immediately after embryogenic
cultures are initiated to prevent variation
and preservation of elite germplasm.
Well-developed somatic embryos are germinated
to regenerate plants (somatic seedlings),
which are acclimatised, and then finally
transferred to the field. Somatic
embryogenesis is highly genotypic dependent,
and it would be useful to modify the culture
medium accordingly. For large-scale production
of somatic embryos, a 'bioreactor' system
works well, e.g. the 'temporary immersion
system' (RITA bioreactor). The low cost of
production of somatic embryos and the high
germination rate are highly desirable for
large-scale production in a bioreactor. This
system has yet to be tried in cassava.
Nuclear techniques for mutagenesis
Nuclear applications in food and
agriculture have contributed greatly to
enhancing agricultural production of seed and
vegetative propagated crops (see IAEA). Even
though nuclear technology has greatly
benefited agriculture, it still has immense
potential in the genetic improvement of
cassava and other crops. More than 2300 mutant
varieties have officially been released in
many countries (see the joint FAO/IAEA
database on mutant varieties.).
Both chemical and physical mutagens are used
to induce mutations. Among them, gamma rays
and ethyl-methane sulphonate (EMS) are widely
used for mutation induction. Fine embryogenic
cell suspension cultures are most suitable for
inducing mutations by transferring the
cultures onto filter paper and then plating
them on agar-solidified culture medium for
gamma irradiation. Initially the LD50 (lethal
dose) dose is determined, which is used as an
optimal dose for mutation induction.
Irradiated cells are further cultured in the
fresh medium for the development, maturation,
and germination of mutated somatic embryos.
This approach provides mutated somatic
seedlings in a short period of time and also
prevents chimeras, which otherwise requires
the plants to be multiplied up to the M1V4
generation for chimera dissociation.
Alternatively, shoot tip or bud wood can be
irradiated and the plants multiplied up to the
M1V4 generation to produce pure mutants by
dissociation of chimeras.
Sung and Somerville (USA), working on
Arabidopsis thaliana, have discovered a
mutation, called "pickle", in plants that
mimics what happens in seeds, which typically
is the accumulation and storing of proteins
and oils. This mutation in plants causes the
accumulation of large amounts of oils,
proteins, and starch in the taproot. This
finding could also make possible the creation
of more nutritious root crops with a better
balance of oil, protein, and starch, e.g. in
cassava and other root crops.
Space-breeding concept
Space conditions can induce mutations of
plant seeds, and can be helpful in
accelerating crop breeding. It may be possible
to obtain rare mutants that may make a
significant breakthrough in important economic
characteristics of crops, such as yield and
quality, which are difficult to get using
other breeding methods on the ground. The
plant seeds are sent into space in a space
rocket, and when the rocket is back on earth,
the plant seeds or in vitro shoot cultures or
microspores are studied to ascertain the
influence of cosmic rays on the generation of
new mutants.
There are only a few countries involved in
this type of work, and China is one of them.
Since 1987, 13 recoverable satellites have
been used by Chinese scientists and
researchers to carry more than 80 kilograms of
plant seeds belonging to over 70 species,
involving their main cereal, fibre, oil,
vegetable, and melon and fruit crops. Through
ground planting and selecting experiments by
breeders in more than 50 research units
covering more than 20 provinces, cities and
regions in China, good results have been
achieved. More than 20 mutant varieties have
been developed and officially released. In
rice, a new variety EYH No. 1 has been
released that gave a total yield 14.5 tonnes/ha.
Space breeding involves a big investment and
good technological support. The opportunities
for conducting a space experiment are very
limited. It is important to simulate on the
ground the conditions of space in order to
conduct research work which would reveal how
space-induced mutations occur and then to
apply the mechanism to plant breeding.
Future prospects
Cassava mutants could be developed to
produce value-added biomass for cost-effective
production of bio-ethanol. The use of this
crop as a source of bio-energy would generate
employment, enhance the economic status of its
growers, protect the environment, and most
likely cut the consumption of fossil fuel.
Arable land for growing cassava may have to be
increased for bio-energy production, as would
the export of bio-ethanol to energy-hungry
countries such as China and India. Brazil has
already started producing bio-ethanol from
cassava. African countries should also follow
Brazil and they could become a major source of
bio-ethanol production. This can be achieved
through biotechnology and mutation, and also
the exploitation of natural cassava germplasm/genetic
variation for breeding. Biotechnology is an
additional tool to assist plant breeders, and
can be helpful in reducing the time to develop
a cultivar.
To date, a lack of communication between plant
breeders and biotechnologists has hindered
crop improvement; however, as growers are now
faced with maintaining sustainable crop
production under climate change conditions and
an ever-growing human population such
cooperation becomes essential.
Courtesy:
Gaurav Jain 'Lakshaya',
M: (+91)- 981 198 1233.
Asia Technology &
Talent Foundation, 21, Skipper House, 9 Pusa
Road, New Delhi – 5, India.
Telephone: 25815011, Fax: 25815013,
Mobile-98-100-46108. E-mail:
asia@techtal.org
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