Natural variation in Brachypodium distachyon responses to combined abiotic stresses

Author:

Ludwig Ella1ORCID,Sumner Joshua1ORCID,Berry Jeffrey12ORCID,Polydore Seth1ORCID,Ficor Tracy1,Agnew Erica1,Haines Kristina1,Greenham Kathleen13ORCID,Fahlgren Noah1ORCID,Mockler Todd C.1ORCID,Gehan Malia A.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Donald Danforth Plant Science Center St. Louis Missouri 63132 USA

2. Bayer Crop Sciences St. Louis Missouri 63017 USA

3. University of Minnesota St. Paul Minnesota 55108 USA

Abstract

SUMMARYThe demand for agricultural production is becoming more challenging as climate change increases global temperature and the frequency of extreme weather events. This study examines the phenotypic variation of 149 accessions of Brachypodium distachyon under drought, heat, and the combination of stresses. Heat alone causes the largest amounts of tissue damage while the combination of stresses causes the largest decrease in biomass compared to other treatments. Notably, Bd21‐0, the reference line for B. distachyon, did not have robust growth under stress conditions, especially the heat and combined drought and heat treatments. The climate of origin was significantly associated with B. distachyon responses to the assessed stress conditions. Additionally, a GWAS found loci associated with changes in plant height and the amount of damaged tissue under stress. Some of these SNPs were closely located to genes known to be involved in responses to abiotic stresses and point to potential causative loci in plant stress response. However, SNPs found to be significantly associated with a response to heat or drought individually are not also significantly associated with the combination of stresses. This, with the phenotypic data, suggests that the effects of these abiotic stresses are not simply additive, and the responses to the combined stresses differ from drought and heat alone.

Funder

National Institute of Food and Agriculture

National Science Foundation

U.S. Department of Energy

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cell Biology,Plant Science,Genetics

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