How to engineer the unknown: Advancing a quantitative and predictive understanding of plant and soil biology to address climate change

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Abstract

Our basic understanding of carbon cycling in the biosphere remains qualitative and incomplete, precluding our ability to effectively engineer novel solutions to climate change. How can we attempt to engineer the unknown? This challenge has been faced before in plant biology, providing a roadmap to guide future efforts. We use examples from over a century of photosynthesis research to illustrate the key principles that will set future plant engineering on a solid footing, namely, an effort to identify the key control variables, quantify the effects of systematically tuning these variables, and use theory to account for these observations. The main contributions of plant synthetic biology will stem not from delivering desired genotypes but from enabling the kind of predictive understanding necessary to rationally design these genotypes in the first place. Only then will synthetic plant biology be able to live up to its promise.

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Alamos, S., & Shih, P. M. (2023). How to engineer the unknown: Advancing a quantitative and predictive understanding of plant and soil biology to address climate change. PLoS Biology, 21(7 July). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.3002190

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