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How we can make crops survive without water

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    I believe that the secret to producing
    extremely drought tolerant crops,
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    which should go some way
    to providing food security in the world,
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    lies in Resurrection plants,
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    pictured here, in an extremely
    droughted state.
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    Now you might think
    that these plants look dead,
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    but they're not.
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    Give them water,
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    and they will resurrect, green up,
    start growing,
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    in 12 to 48 hours.
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    No why would I suggest
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    that producing drought tolerant crops
    will go towards providing food security?
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    Well the current world population
    is around 7 billion.
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    And it's estimated that by 2050,
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    we'll be between 9 and 10 billion people,
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    with the bulk of this growth
    happening in Africa.
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    The food and agricultural
    organizations of the world
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    have suggested that we need a 70 percent
    increase in current agricultural practice
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    to meet that demand.
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    Now given that plants
    are at the base of the food chain,
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    most of that's going
    to have to come from plants.
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    Now that percentage of 70 percent
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    does not take into consideration
    the potential effects of climate change.
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    This is taken from a study by Dye
    published in 2011,
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    where he took into consideration
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    all the potential effects
    of climate change
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    and expressed them
    amongst other things,
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    increased aridity due to lack or rain
    or infrequent rain.
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    Now the areas in red shown here,
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    are areas that until recently, have been
    very successfully used for agriculture,
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    but cannot anymore
    because of lack of rain fall.
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    This is the situation
    that's predicted to happen in 2050.
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    Much of Africa,
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    in fact much of the world,
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    is going to be in trouble.
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    We're going to have to think of some
    very smart ways of producing food.
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    And preferably among them,
    some drought-tolerant crops.
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    The other thing to remember about Africa
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    is that most of the
    agriculture is rain fed.
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    Now making drought-tolerant crops
    is not the easiest thing in the world.
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    And the reason for this is water.
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    Water is essential to life on this planet.
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    All living, actively
    metabolizing organisms,
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    from microbes to you and I,
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    are comprised predominately of water,
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    all life reactions happen in water,
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    and loss of a small amount
    of water results in death.
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    You and I are 65 percent water,
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    we lose one percent of that, we die.
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    But we can make behavioral
    changes to avoid that.
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    Plants can't.
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    They're stuck in the ground.
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    So in the first instance, they have
    a little bit more water than us,
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    about 95 percent water,
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    and they can lose
    a little bit more than us,
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    like 10 to about 70 percent,
    depending on the species,
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    but for short periods only.
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    Most of them will either try to resist
    or avoid water loss.
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    So extreme examples of resistors
    can be found in succulents,
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    they tend to be small, ver attractive,
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    but they hold onto their water
    at such great cost
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    that they grow extremely slowly.
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    Examples of avoidance of water loss
    are found in trees and shrubs.
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    They send down very deep roots,
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    mine subterranean water supplies,
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    and just keep flushing
    it through them at all times,
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    keeping themselves hydrated.
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    The one on the right is called a Baobab,
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    it's also called the upside-down tree,
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    simply because the proportion
    of roots to chutes is so great
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    that it looks like the tree
    is being planted upside down.
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    And of course the roots are required
    for hydration of that plant.
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    And probably the most common strategy
    of avoidance is found in annuals.
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    Annuals make up the bulk
    of our plant food supplies.
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    Up the west coast of my country,
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    for much the year you don't see
    much vegetation growth.
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    But come the spring rains,
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    you get this.
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    Flowering of the desert.
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    Now the strategy in annuals,
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    is to grow only in the rainy season.
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    At the end of that season
    they produce a seed,
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    which is dry, eight to 10 percent water,
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    but very much alive.
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    And anything that is that dry
    and still alive,
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    we call desiccation-tolerant.
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    The next time the rainy season comes,
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    they germinate and grow,
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    and the whole cycle just starts again.
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    It's widely believed that the evolution
    of desiccation-tolerant seeds
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    allowed the colonization and the radiation
    of flowering plants, or angiosperms,
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    onto land.
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    But back to annuals
    as our major form of food supplies.
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    Wheat, rice and maze form 95 percent
    of our plant food supplies.
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    And it's been a great strategy,
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    because in a short space of time
    you can produce a lot of seed,
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    seeds are energy-rich so you can
    store a lot of food calories,
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    you can store it in times of plenty
    for times of famine,
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    but there's a down side.
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    The vegetative tissues,
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    the roots and leaves of annuals,
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    do not have much by way
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    of inherent resistance, avoidance
    or tolerance characteristics.
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    They just don't need them.
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    They grow in the rainy season
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    and they've got a seed to help them
    survive the rest of the year.
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    And so despite concerted
    efforts in agriculture
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    to make crops with improved properties
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    of resistance, avoidance and tolerance --
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    particularly resistance and avoidance
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    because we've had good models
    to understand how those work --
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    we still get images like this.
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    Maze crop in Africa,
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    two weeks without rain,
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    and it's dead.
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    Now there is a solution.
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    Resurrection plants.
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    These plants can lose 95 percent
    of their cellular water,
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    remain in a dry, dead-like state
    for months to years,
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    and give them water,
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    they green up and start growing again.
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    Like seeds, they are desiccation-tolerant.
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    Like seeds, these can withstand extremes
    of environmental conditions.
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    And this is a really rare phenomenon.
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    There are only 135 flowering
    plant species that can do this.
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    I'm going to show you a video
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    of the resurrection process
    of these three species
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    in that order.
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    And at the bottom,
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    there's a time axis so you can see
    how quickly it happens.
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    [Video]
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    (Applause)
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    Pretty amazing, huh?
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    So I've spent the last 21 years
    trying to understand how they do this.
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    How do these plants dry without dying?
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    And I work on a variety of different
    Resurrection plants,
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    shown here in the hydrated and dry states,
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    for a number of reasons.
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    One of them being is that
    each of these plants serve as a model
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    for a crop that I'd like
    to make drought-tolerant.
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    So on the extreme top left for example,
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    is a grass, it's called
    Eragrostis Nindensis,
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    it's called a close relative called
    Eragrostis Tef,
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    a lot of you might know it as "Tef,"
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    it's a staple food in Ethiopia,
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    it's gluten-free,
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    and it's something we would like
    to make drought-tolerant.
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    The other reason for looking
    at a number of plants,
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    is that, as least initially,
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    I wanted to find out:
    do they do the same thing?
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    Do they all use the same mechanisms
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    to be able to lose
    all that water and not die?
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    So I undertook what we call
    a Systems Biology approach
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    in order to get
    a comprehensive understanding
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    of desiccation tolerance,
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    in which we look at everything
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    from the molecular to the whole plant
    ecophysiological level.
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    For example we look at things like
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    changes in the plant anatomy
    when they're dried out,
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    and their ultrasctructure.
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    We look at the transcriptome,
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    which is just a term for a technology
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    in which we look at the genes
    that are switched on or off,
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    in response to drying.
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    Most genes will code for proteins
    so we look at the proteome.
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    What are the proteins made
    in response to drying?
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    Some proteins would code for enzymes
    which make metabolytes,
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    so we look at the metabolome.
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    Now this is important because plants
    are stuck in the ground.
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    They use what I call a highly tuned
    chemical arsenal
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    to protect themselves from all
    the stresses of their environment.
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    So it's important that we look
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    at the chemical changes
    involved in drying.
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    The last study that we do
    at the molecular level
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    is we study the lipidome --
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    the lipid changes in response to drying.
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    And that's also important
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    because all biological membranes
    are made of lipids.
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    They're held as membranes
    because they're in water.
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    Take away the water,
    those membranes fall apart.
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    Lipids also act as signals
    to turn on genes.
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    Then we use physiological
    and biochemical studies
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    to try and understand the function
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    of the putative protectants that we've
    actually discovered in our other studies.
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    And we use all of that
    to try and understand
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    how the plant copes
    with its natural environment.
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    Now I've always had the philosphy
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    that I needed a comprehensive
    understanding
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    of the mechanisms of desiccation tolerance
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    in order to make a meaningful suggestion
    for a biotic application.
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    I'm sure some of you are thinking,
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    "by biotic application, so she mean she's
    going to make genetically modified crops?"
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    And the answer to that question is,
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    it depends on your definition
    of genetic modification.
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    All of the crops that we eat today,
    wheat, grass and maze,
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    are highly genetically modified
    from their ancenstors,
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    but we don't consider them "GM"
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    because they're being produced
    by conventional breeding.
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    If you mean,
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    "am I going to put resurrection plant
    genes into crops?"
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    your answer is yes.
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    In the essence of time,
    we have tried that approach.
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    More appropriately,
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    some of my collaborators at UCT,
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    Jennifer Thomson and Suhail Rafudeeen,
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    have spearheaded that approach
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    and I'm going to show you
    some data soon.
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    But we're about to embark upon
    an extremely ambitious approach,
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    in which we aim to turn on
    whole suites of genes
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    that are already present in every crop.
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    They're just never turned on
    under extreme drought conditions.
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    I leave it up to you to decide
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    whether those should
    be called "GM" or not.
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    I'm going to now just give you
    some of the data from that first approach.
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    And in order to do that
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    I have to explain a little bit
    about how genes work.
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    So you probably all know
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    that genes are made
    of double-stranded DNA.
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    It's wound very tightly into chromosomes
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    that are present
    in every cell of your body,
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    or in a plant's body.
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    If you unwind that DNA, you get genes.
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    And each gene has a promoter,
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    which is an on/off switch,
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    the gene coding region,
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    and then the terminator,
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    which indicates
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    that this is the end of this gene,
    the next gene will start.
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    Now promoters are not
    simple on-off switches.
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    They normally require
    a lot of fine tuning,
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    lots of things to be present and correct
    before that gene is switched on.
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    So what's typically done
    in biotech studies
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    is that we use an inducible promoter,
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    we know how to switch it on.
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    We couple that to genes of interest,
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    and put that into a plant
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    and see how the plant responds.
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    Now in the study that I'm going
    to talk to you about,
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    my collaborators used
    a drought-induced promoter,
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    which we discovered
    in a resurrection plant.
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    Now the nice thing about this promoter
    is that we do nothing.
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    The plant itself senses drought.
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    And we've used it
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    to drive antioxidant genes
    from resurrection plants.
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    Why antioxidant genes?
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    Well, all stresses,
    particularly drought stress,
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    results in the formation of free radicals,
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    or reactive oxygen species,
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    which are highly damaging
    and can cause crop death.
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    What antioxidants do is stop that damage.
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    So here's some data from a main strain
    that's very popularly used in Africa.
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    To the left of the arrow are plants
    without the genes,
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    to the right --
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    plants with the antioxidant genes.
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    After three weeks without watering,
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    the ones with the genes
    do a hell of a lot better.
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    Now to the final approach.
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    My research has shown
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    that there's considerable similarity
    in the mechanisms of desiccation tolerance
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    in seeds and resurrection plants.
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    So I ask the question,
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    are they using the same genes?
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    Or slightly differently phrased,
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    are resurrection plants utilizing genes
    evolved for seed desiccation tolerance
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    in their roots and leaves?
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    Have they re-tasked these seed genes
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    in roots and leaves
    of resurrection plants?
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    And I answer that question,
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    as a consequence of a lot
    of research from my group
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    and recent collaborations from a group
    of Henk Hilhorst in the Netherlands,
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    Mel Oliver in the United States,
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    and Julia Buitink, in France,
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    the answer is, yes.
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    There is a core set of genes
    that are involved in both.
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    And I'm going to illustrate this
    very crudely for maze,
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    where the chromosomes
    below the off switch
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    represent all the genes that are required
    for desiccation tolerance.
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    So as maze seeds dried on
    at the end of their period of development,
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    they switch these genes on.
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    Resurrection plants
    switch on the same genes
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    when they're dried on.
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    All modern crops, therefore,
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    have these genes
    in their roots and leaves,
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    they just never switch them on.
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    They only switch them on in seed tissues.
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    So what we're trying to do right now
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    is to understand the environmental
    and cellular signals
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    which switch on these genes
    in resurrection plants,
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    to mimic the process in crops.
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    And just a final thought.
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    What we're trying to do very rapidly,
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    is to repeat what nature did
    in the evolution of resurrection plants
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    some 10 to 40 million years ago.
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    My plants and I
    thank you for your attention.
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    (Applause)
Title:
How we can make crops survive without water
Speaker:
Jill Farrant
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
13:56

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