Genotype-Phenotype Models of Plant Growth: From Single Genes to Ideotype Prediction

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13 October 2016
Connecting Biochemical Photosynthesis Models with Crop Models to Support Crop Improvement
Alex Wu
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Graeme L. Hammer
Schematic diagram of the emerging cross-scale modeling framework connecting biochemical/leaf-level photosynthesis and canopy/crop-level growth and development dynamics. Crop growth and development is driven by the development of canopy leaf area and canopy biomass growth, both of which are influenced by the prevailing environment and the photosynthesis output of individual leaves in the canopy. The canopy captures resources from the environment. Leaf photosynthesis is driven by the attributes of the crop canopy and leaves. LAI, SLN, and crop water status are determined by crop scale growth and development dynamics, while light, leaf temperature, and CO2 experienced by leaves are influenced by canopy attributes, LAI and k. This two-way connection between biochemical and crop level (the two thick arrows) is an important consideration in the cross-scale modeling framework. PAR, photosynthetic active radiation; LAI, leaf area index; k, canopy light extinction coefficient; SLN, specific leaf nitrogen; PCR, photosynthetic carbon reduction cycle; PCO, photorespiratory carbon oxidation cycle; CHO, carbohydrates synthesized by photosynthesis.

The next advance in field crop productivity will likely need to come from improving crop use efficiency of resources (e.g., light, water, and nitrogen), aspects of which are closely linked with overall crop photosynthetic efficiency. Progress in genetic manipulation of photosynthesis is confounded by uncertainties of consequences at crop level because of difficulties connecting across scales. Crop growth and development simulation models that integrate across biological levels of organization and use a gene-to-phenotype modeling approach may present a way forward. There has been a long history of development of crop models capable of simulating dynamics of crop physiological attributes. Many crop models incorporate canopy photosynthesis (source) as a key driver for crop growth, while others derive crop growth from the balance between source- and sink-limitations. Modeling leaf photosynthesis has progressed from empirical modeling via light response curves to a more mechanistic basis, having clearer links to the underlying biochemical processes of photosynthesis. Cross-scale modeling that connects models at the biochemical and crop levels and utilizes developments in upscaling leaf-level models to canopy models has the potential to bridge the gap between photosynthetic manipulation at the biochemical level and its consequences on crop productivity. Here we review approaches to this emerging cross-scale modeling framework and reinforce the need for connections across levels of modeling. Further, we propose strategies for connecting biochemical models of photosynthesis into the cross-scale modeling framework to support crop improvement through photosynthetic manipulation.

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Frontiers in Plant Science

Emerging Methodologies in Genotype-Phenotype Models for Crop Improvement
Edited by Gerhard Buck-Sorlin, Lifeng Xu
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30 April 2025
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