Guard cell and subsidiary cell sizes are key determinants for stomatal kinetics and drought adaptation in cereal crops

Author:

Rui Mengmeng1,Chen Rongjia1,Jing Yi2,Wu Feibo1ORCID,Chen Zhong‐Hua34ORCID,Tissue David45,Jiang Hangjin6,Wang Yizhou17ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Crop Science, College of Agriculture and Biotechnology Zhejiang University Hangzhou 310058 China

2. BGI‐Sanya Sanya 572025 China

3. School of Science Western Sydney University Penrith NSW 2751 Australia

4. Hawkesbury Institute for the Environment Western Sydney University Penrith NSW 2751 Australia

5. Global Centre for Land‐Based Innovation Western Sydney University Richmond NSW 2753 Australia

6. Center for Data Science Zhejiang University Hangzhou 310058 China

7. Zhejiang Provincial Key Laboratory of Crop Germplasm Zhejiang University Hangzhou 310058 China

Abstract

Summary Climate change‐induced drought is a major threat to agriculture. C4 crops have a higher water use efficiency (WUE) and better adaptability to drought than C3 crops due to their smaller stomatal morphology and faster response. However, our understanding of stomatal behaviours in both C3 and C4 Poaceae crops is limited by knowledge gaps in physical traits of guard cell (GC) and subsidiary cell (SC). We employed infrared gas exchange analysis and a stomatal assay to explore the relationship between GC/SC sizes and stomatal kinetics across diverse drought conditions in two C3 (wheat and barley) and three C4 (maize, sorghum and foxtail millet) upland Poaceae crops. Through statistical analyses, we proposed a GCSC‐τ model to demonstrate how morphological differences affect stomatal kinetics in C4 Poaceae crops. Our findings reveal that morphological variations specifically correlate with stomatal kinetics in C4 Poaceae crops, but not in C3 ones. Subsequent modelling and experimental validation provide further evidence that GC/SC sizes significantly impact stomatal kinetics, which affects stomatal responses to different drought conditions and thereby WUE in C4 Poaceae crops. These findings emphasize the crucial advantage of GC/SC morphological characteristics and stomatal kinetics for the drought adaptability of C4 Poaceae crops, highlighting their potential as future climate‐resilient crops.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Natural Science Foundation of Zhejiang Province

Australian Research Council

Grains Research and Development Corporation

Publisher

Wiley

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