Combined effects of CO2 enrichment, diurnal light levels and water stress on foliar metabolites of potato plants grown in naturally sunlit controlled environment chambers

被引:20
作者
Barnaby, Jinyoung Y. [1 ]
Fleisher, David [1 ]
Reddy, Vangimalla [1 ]
Sicher, Richard [1 ]
机构
[1] USDA ARS, Crop Syst & Global Change Lab, Beltsville, MD 20705 USA
关键词
SOLANUM-TUBEROSUM; ELEVATED CO2; AMINO-ACIDS; DROUGHT; RESPONSES; LEAVES; GENES; ACCUMULATION; SALINITY; ROLES;
D O I
10.1111/ppl.12238
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
Experiments were conducted in outdoor, naturally sunlit, soil-plant-atmosphere research (SPAR) chambers using plants grown in pots. Drought treatments were imposed on potato plants (Solanum tuberosum cv. Kennebec) beginning 10 days after tuber initiation. A total of 23 out of 37 foliar metabolites were affected by drought when measured 11 days after initiating water stress treatments. Compounds that accumulated in response to drought were hexoses, polyols, branched chain amino acids (BCAAs) and aromatic amino acids, such as proline. Conversely, leaf starch, alanine, aspartate and several organic acids involved in respiratory metabolism decreased with drought. Depending upon harvest date, a maximum of 12 and 17 foliar metabolites also responded to either CO2 enrichment or diurnal treatments, respectively. In addition, about 20% of the measured metabolites in potato leaflets were simultaneously affected by drought, CO2 enrichment and diurnal factors combined. This group contained BCAAs, hexoses, leaf starch and malate. Polyols and proline accumulated in response to water stress but did not vary diurnally. Water stress also amplified diurnal variations of hexoses and starch in comparison to control samples. Consequently, specific drought responsive metabolites in potato leaflets were dramatically affected by daily changes of photosynthetic carbon metabolism.
引用
收藏
页码:243 / 252
页数:10
相关论文
共 41 条
[1]   Plant physiology and proteomics reveals the leaf response to drought in alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.) [J].
Aranjuelo, Iker ;
Molero, Gemma ;
Erice, Gorka ;
Christophe Avice, Jean ;
Nogues, Salvador .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BOTANY, 2011, 62 (01) :111-123
[2]  
Barnaby JY, 2013, PLOS ONE, V9
[3]  
Binder Stefan, 2010, Arabidopsis Book, V8, pe0137, DOI 10.1199/tab.0137
[4]   PLANT PRODUCTIVITY AND ENVIRONMENT [J].
BOYER, JS .
SCIENCE, 1982, 218 (4571) :443-448
[5]  
Bray E.A., 2000, AM SOC PLANT PHYSIOL, P1158, DOI DOI 10.1007/S11104-007-9430-2
[6]   Plant responses to water deficit [J].
Bray, EA .
TRENDS IN PLANT SCIENCE, 1997, 2 (02) :48-54
[7]   Molecular and physiological approaches to maize improvement for drought tolerance [J].
Bruce, WB ;
Edmeades, GO ;
Barker, TC .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BOTANY, 2002, 53 (366) :13-25
[8]   Understanding plant responses to drought - from genes to the whole plant [J].
Chaves, MM ;
Maroco, JP ;
Pereira, JS .
FUNCTIONAL PLANT BIOLOGY, 2003, 30 (03) :239-264
[9]   Effects of short- and long-term elevated CO2 on the expression of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase genes and carbohydrate accumulation in leaves of Arabidopsis thaliana (L) Heynh [J].
Cheng, SH ;
Moore, BD ;
Seemann, JR .
PLANT PHYSIOLOGY, 1998, 116 (02) :715-723
[10]   REGULATION OF PHOTORESPIRATION IN C3 AND C4 SPECIES [J].
CHOLLET, R ;
OGREN, WL .
BOTANICAL REVIEW, 1975, 41 (02) :137-179