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  Location: Home >> Faculty >> Center for Genome Biology
  Center for Genome Biology


Cao Xu


Education
2001-2005
B.S. in plant biology, Shandong Agricultural University, Taian, China
2005-2012
Ph.D. in Genetics, Institute of Genetics and Developmental Biology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China
 
Employment History
2013-2017
Postdoctoral Research Fellow in Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Cold Spring Harbor, New York, USA
2017-       
Principle Investigator at Institute of Genetics and Developmental Biology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China
2017-       
Principle Investigator at CAS-JIC Centre of Excellence for Plant and Microbial Science (CEPAMS)


The Xu laboratory uses tomato as research model to study how small peptide signaling and transcriptional condensation regulate developmental robustness and environmental resilience of plants, innovates rapid and precise breeding strategies for creating climate-smart crops.
 
1. Small peptide signaling and plant resilience
Cells must communicate over both short and long physiological ranges to ensure proper developmental patterning and functional connections. In plants, this can be achieved through small signaling peptides (SSP). While several SSPs have recently been characterized with vital roles in multiple biological processes, our understanding of plant small peptide signaling is still very limited (no more than 10% of plant small peptides signals have been functionally characterized) and hindered by many hurdles. Xu lab is developing novel strategies to reveal the landscape and impact of plant peptide signals in cell-to-cell communications, and their roles in controlling developmental robustness and stress resilience of plants.
 
 
2. Phase separation regulated cell-fate programming and reprogramming
The capacity of cells to acquire new fates is central to the development of multicellular organisms. How cells adopt different identities has been long fascinated biologists. Activation of transcription factors is a precisely controlled biological process that determines the gene-expression program characteristic of each cell type. Phase-separated condensates of the transcription apparatus at key cell-identity genes have been reported in mammalian cells but unknown in plants. Xu lab aims to elucidate how cellular and environmental cues induced liquid-liquid phase separation of plant transcription factors precisely control gene-expression pattern of cell-identity genes.
 
 
3. Climate-resilient crop innovation for sustainable agriculture
Global climate change and increasing human populations are creating an urgent need to improve crop productivity. Crop domestication and improvement by conventional methods often involves substantial inbreeding, which can lead to a loss of fitness due to the accumulation of deleterious genetic variants and loss of biological diversity. These challenges are calling for novel strategies to create nutritious and climate-smart crops. Rational design through precisely engineering or rewiring cellular processes such as photosynthesis and transcription machineries have shown great potential to improve crop productivity. Alternatively, de novo domestication of wild plants that are naturally endowed with stress tolerance or high nutrients by introducing desirable agronomic traits using genome editing have been shown practicable. Our research integrates multi-omics, genome editing and synthetic biology strategies to promote crop rational design and de novo domestication.
 

PUBLICATIONS (# Corresponding author; *co-first author)
2022
Choon-Tak Kwon, Lingli Tang, Xingang Wang, lacopo Gentile, Anat Hendelman, Gina Robitaille, Joyce Van Eck, Cao Xu& Zachary B. Lippman#?(2022) Dynamic evolution of small signalling peptide compensation in plant stem cell control. Nature Plants.?8(4):346-355.
News & Views
 
Xiaozhen Huang*, Nan Xiao*, Yupan Zou, Yue Xie, Lingli Tang, Yueqin Zhang, Yuan Yu, Yiting Li, Cao Xu#(2022) Heterotypic transcriptional condensates formed by prion-like paralogous proteins canalize flowering transition in tomato. Genome Biology. 23(1):78.
News & Views
Yue Xie, Tinghao Zhang, Xiaozhen Huang, Cao Xu# (2022) A two-in-one breeding strategy boosts rapid utilization of wild species and elite cultivars. Plant Biotechnology Journal.?20(5):800-802.
News & Views
 
2021
Xiaozhen Huang*, Shudong Chen*, Weiping Li, Lingli Tang, Yueqin Zhang, Ning Yang, Yupan Zou, Xiawan Zhai, Nan Xiao, Wei Liu, Pilong Li#?& Cao Xu# (2021) ROS regulated reversible protein phase separation synchronizes plant flowering. Nature Chemical Biology. 17(5):549~557 (Featured Article, Highlighted by Nature Chemical Biology, Feb. 25. 2021).
News & Views
 
2020
Lichan Tu*, Ping Su*, Zhongren Zhang*, Linhui Gao, Jiadian Wang, Tianyuan Hu, Jiawei Zhou, Yifeng Zhang, Yujun Zhao, Yuan Liu, Yadi Song, Yuru Tong, Yun Lu, Jian Yang,?Cao Xu, Meirong Jia, Reuben J. Peters, Luqi Huang#?& Wei Gao#?(2020) Genome of Tripterygium wilfordii and identification of cytochrome P450 involved in triptolide biosynthesis.?Nature Communications. 11: 971
 
2019
Daniel Rodriguez-Leal*,?Cao Xu*, Choon-Tak Kwon, Cara Soyars, Edgar Demesa-Arevalo, Jarrett Man, Lei Liu, Zachary H. Lemmon, Daniel S. Jones, Joyce Van Eck, David P. Jackson#, Madelaine E. Bartlett#, Zachary L. Nimchuk#?and Zachary B. Lippman#?(2019) Evolution of buffering in a genetic circuit controlling plant stem cell proliferation.?Nature Genetics. 51(5): 786-792 (Highlighted by Nature Genetics 51, 770-771, 2019).
News & Views
Different ways to be redundant
 
2018
Tingdong Li*, Xinping Yang*, Yuan Yu*, Xiaomin Si, Xiawan Zhai, Huawei Zhang, Wenxia Dong, Caixia Gao#&?Cao Xu#?(2018) Domestication of wild tomato is accelerated by genome editing.?Nature Biotechnology. doi:10.1038/nbt.4273 (Highlighted by Nature, Oct. 2. 2018)
News & Views
Super-tomato shows what plant scientists can do
CRISPR Can Make Old Tomatoes, New Tomatoes
De novo domestication of wild tomato using genome editing
 
Xiaozhen Huang, Lingli Tang, Yuan Yu, Justin Dalrymple, Zachary B. Lippman#?&?Cao Xu#?(2018) Control of flowering and inflorescence architecture in tomato by synergistic interactions between ALOG transcription factors.?Journal of Genetics and Genomics. doi: 10.1016/j.jgg.2018.03.008.
 
Ning Zhang*, Hong Yu*, Hao Yu*, Yueyue Cai, Linzhou Huang,?Cao Xu, Guosheng Xiong, Xiangbing Meng, Jiyao Wang, Haofeng Chen, Guifu Liu, Yanhui Jing, Yundong Yuan, Yan Liang, Shujia Li, Steven M Smith, Jiayang Li, and Yonghong Wang#?(2018) A core regulatory pathway controlling rice tiller angle mediated by the LAZY1-dependent asymmetric distribution of auxin.?Plant Cell. doi: 10.1105/tpc.18.00063.
 
2016
Cao Xu, Soon Ju Park, Joyce Van Eck, and Zachary B. Lippman#?(2016) Control of inflorescence architecture in tomato by BTB/POZ transcriptional regulators.?Genes & Development. 30(18): 2048- 2061. (Recommended by F1000 Prime)
 
2015
Cao Xu*, Katie L. Liberatore*, Cora A MacAlister, Zejun Huang, Yi-Hsuan Chu, Ke Jiang, Christopher Brooks, Mari Ogawa-Ohnishi, Guangyan Xiong, Markus Pauly, Joyce Van Eck, Yoshikatsu Matsubayashi, Esther van der Knaap & Zachary B Lippman#?(2015) A cascade of arabinosyltransferases controls shoot meristem size in tomato.?Nature Genetics. 47(7): 784-792. (Featured on the cover, Highlighted by Nature Genetics 47, 698–699 (2015), by Science, May. 25, 2015, Recommended by F1000 Prime)
News & Views
Sweet size control in tomato
Scientists find way to create supersized fruit
 
2012
Cao Xu*, Yonghong Wang*, Yanchun Yu*, Jingbo Duan, Zhigang Liao, Guosheng Xiong, Xiangbing Meng, Guifu Liu, Qian Qian# & Jiayang Li# (2012) Degradation of MONOCULM 1 by APC/CTAD1 regulates rice tillering. Nature Communications. 3:750.
https://www.nature.com/articles/ncomms1743