Manipulating N Uptake
Corn Of The Future Will Yield With Less Nitrogen Inputs
JOHNSTON, IA.
Work to encourage a corn plant to absorb
more nitrogen when it is available and to
store it within the plant until the plant
needs it are two of the projects underway by a
group of researchers led by Marc Albertsen, Pioneer’s
Research Director for Agronomic Traits.
“We want each plant to be as effective as possible
in taking nitrogen out of the ground as it
grows,” he said.
Albertsen showed pictures of plants that were
able to extract every bit of nitrogen that they
could in order to
produce higher
yields. A transgene
had been
inserted into
these plants to
enhance their
nitrogen uptake
capability.
In trials the
past year and in
work that has
been underway
for about five
years, Pioneer
researchers have
been able to
identify genes
that influence a
plant’s ability to
absorb and to
store nitrogen.
These genes
have been inserted
into hybrids
as part of the Nitrogen Use Efficiency
(NUE) Discovery pipeline. The past year, trials
were conducted to compare these transgenic hybrids
with their non-transgenic hybrid control
lines. These trials were conducted in fields that
had been deliberately depleted of nitrogen. Only
40 pounds of nitrogen per acre were applied to
these fields. Hybrids transgenic for the NUE
genes significantly out-yielded their non-transgenic
counterparts. Products resulting from
these studies are expected to be released in
seven or eight years from now.
“The long development time is a consequence
of the difficult nature of this work, along with
the regulatory processes mandated by government
agencies through which all transgenics
must pass,” Albertsen stated. “In the meantime,
we are going to work to improve these lines to
ensure they meet our expectations for improving
nitrogen use efficiency in corn.”
The results of these trials also are expected to
have a positive impact on the environment. Developing
more efficient nitrogen uptake and utilization
may enable farmers to reduce the
amount of nitrogen applied, resulting is less nitrogen
runoff and keeping it from leaching into
nearby streams and waterways.
Today, plant breeders primarily improve hybrids
under conditions representative of the conditions
that farmers currently grow corn. In
general, this means relatively high levels of nitrogen.
“For the future, we want to give farmers hybrid
options that will impact nitrogen application levels
to have both a positive effect on a farmer’s
bottom line and to curb any adverse effect on the
environment,” he continued. “So we are working
on several approaches to understand how a
plant responds to different levels of nitrogen. For
example, consider the nitrogen levels present
during the seedling stage. The seedling is probably
in the best environment for nitrogen that it
will experience throughout its entire cycle. Yet,
the plant does not have a good ‘sink’ to either
store or utilize nitrogen. Eventually, the ear becomes
a powerful ‘sink’ once grain filling commences.
The irony is that nitrogen levels at the
grain filling stage can be limiting, right when the
plant needs it the most.”
Researchers have looked at various things they
can do at an early growth stage that would result
in more nitrogen uptake when nitrogen is
plentiful. They have looked at modifying the
plant with transgenes so it can store some of the
nitrogen for use later on. That approach is still
in its infancy, although candidate genes have
been identified.
“It sounds like a great idea, but a lot of times
what seems like a great idea doesn’t always work
out as simply as we would like,” Albertsen said.
Still they are optimistic.
Another approach taken is to improve the biochemical
pathways that are involved in nitrogen
uptake, nitrogen transport, and final nitrogen
utilization. This research approach seeks to find
the way nitrogen is converted into harvestable
yield.
“We try to exploit some of our general knowledge
and say ‘look, if we were going to modify
some of these pathways, which ones and where
would we make those modifications?’” he said.
“Some of these ideas have resulted in specific
genes being cloned and have resulted in transgenic
plants expressing these genes. Our testing
will determine whether these genes are the right
ones to impact the nitrogen-related pathways.”
Pioneer researchers also work with model
plant systems in their quest for genes impacting
nitrogen use efficiency. Model systems often are
advantageous in that they have shorter life cycles
and/or require less growing space than
does corn. This enables researchers to challenge
specially-designed collections of model system
plants with stresses to determine how the plants
respond. For example, populations of model
plants may be challenged with low nitrogen in
one experiment and with high nitrogen in another.
While it seems logical to challenge plants
with low nitrogen to identify genes that might
enable a plant to more efficiently utilize the nitrogen
it is presented with, it may be less intuitive
why Albertsen and his team would use a
high nitrogen challenge.
“Sometimes under plentiful nitrogen, roots
don’t develop as much as they could,” he said.
“It is as if the plant becomes ‘lazy’ since it doesn’t
have to search too hard to obtain the nitrogen
it needs. We want those roots to develop as
much as possible. We want those plants to take
up as much nitrogen as they can at every stage
of the plant’s life cycle. We want that plant to develop
a robust root structure to ensure the plant
is able to uptake adequate water and nutrients,
as well as contribute to overall standability of
the plant at harvest. Asking a plant to develop
robust roots under plentiful nitrogen is against
what a plant is normally programmed to do.”
Albertsen further explained the model systems
used to look for genes that might offer improvements
to the efficient use of nitrogen by corn. He
said that genes identified from these model systems
can be isolated, cloned, and inserted into
corn for testing.
“At Pioneer we have several different types of
testing environments, one of which we call our
managed stress environment,” he said. “For our
nitrogen work, these are fields that we have purposely
depleted of nitrogen.
“Sometimes, we have had to grow multiple
crops without intervening fertilizer application
to obtain the desired level of nitrogen depletion,”
Albertsen explained. “We maintain the fertility of
these fields at this level by applying low levels of
nitrogen for each subsequent growing season.
Using this low nitrogen testing environment, we
are able to determine whether the transgenes we
have put into the corn plant are leading to efficient
use of whatever nitrogen is present.”
They can see what the transgenic corn plants
can do on a reduced nitrogen supply. They also
can compare which of these genes do the best.
Last year was the first year in running replicated
yield trials for nitrogen use efficiency. These trials
were conducted both at a site in California
and at a site here in the Midwest, actually right
across the street from Pioneer headquarters.
There’s also a replicated trial in another location
in northern Iowa near Cedar Falls.
“We conducted replicated yield trials for the
first time and we identified several interesting
combinations of genes that we will be testing
more extensively next year,” Albertsen said.
He showed photos of the test plots and the
comparisons of the different transgenes. One
photo showed leaves from two rows of plants.
One of the rows was of a promising transgenic,
while the other row was of its non-transgenic
control.
“You can see there is much more yellowing of
the leaves in the non-transgenic row than in the
transgenic row,” he said.
The photos showed a clear variation, and he
reported the transgenic plants did show significant
yield increases. He stressed, however, that
while these transgenics demonstrate the effect
his group is looking for, there is still much more
work to be done. The photographs plainly
showed that the transgenes have an effect on
the plant’s performance.
Though the trials look promising, more testing
will be required to understand all the benefits
these transgenics might offer farmers. Although
Albertsen recommends that farmers follow the
fertilizer recommendations and practices for
their particular area, he does believe that sidedressing
nitrogen as late as possible without disturbing
the root structure will be beneficial to
final productivity.
“The key is to make sure nitrogen is available
when the plant really needs it,” he said.
Albertsen said that his research group has two
goals in developing nitrogen use efficiency products.
One is to enhance the yield with current
levels of nitrogen. The other is to maintain current
yields with reduced nitrogen inputs. With
nitrogen costs increasing dramatically this year,
and with prospects of the cost going even higher,
more nitrogen-efficient corn could be a boon for
farmers.
“If it is biologically possible, we are going to deliver
on our goals,” he said. “Remember though,
at this point we have just completed our first
year of yield trials. That means we still have a
ways to go, but we are very encouraged and excited
by our results.”
Albertsen noted that researchers today have
more techniques available than ever before to
help them tease apart what can make a plant
utilize nitrogen more efficiently.
“Scientists have a good understanding of some
of the biochemical pathways involved in nitrogen
utilization,” he said. “Today, we have many
of the genes responsible for these pathways
cloned and ready for manipulation via genetic
engineering. At Pioneer, we also have the gene
shuffling technology available to us that we acquired
about two years ago from a California
biotech company. This technology enabled us to
develop our GAT herbicide resistance gene. We
hope to utilize this technology to take a gene
critical to nitrogen utilization and to ‘shuffle it’ to
make the gene perform more effectively.”
Albertsen described another capability at Pioneer
that gives their researchers an edge, which
is the ability to test transgenes in a high thruput
system in corn in the greenhouse.
“This system, called the ‘fast’ corn system, enables
us to test transgenes in corn that were
originally identified in model plants,” Albertsen
said. “We simply must find out as early as possible
how these genes perform in corn. This system
enables us to sort through transgenes
quickly so that we are only taking transgenes to
the field that have already proven their efficacy
in corn. It allows us to ‘hunt where the ducks
are’,” he concluded. Δ
Pioneer’s Research Director for
Agronomic Traits,
Marc Albertsen, leads two research
projects to encourage a
corn plant to absorb and store nitrogen
until the plant needs it.
Photo by John LaRose