Sunflower Hybrids and Inbred Lines Adopt Different Physiological Strategies and Proteome Responses to Cope with Water Deficit

Author:

Duruflé Harold12ORCID,Balliau Thierry3,Blanchet Nicolas1,Chaubet Adeline1,Duhnen Alexandra1,Pouilly Nicolas1,Blein-Nicolas Mélisande3,Mangin Brigitte1,Maury Pierre4,Langlade Nicolas Bernard1,Zivy Michel3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. INRAE UMR441, CNRS UMR2594, LIPME, Université de Toulouse, 31077 Toulouse, France

2. INRAE, ONF, BioForA, 45075 Orleans, France

3. AgroParisTech, GQE—Le Moulon, PAPPSO, Université Paris-Saclay, INRAE, CNRS, 91190 Gif-sur-Yvette, France

4. INRAE, INP-ENSAT Toulouse, UMR AGIR, Université de Toulouse, 31000 Toulouse, France

Abstract

Sunflower is a hybrid crop that is considered moderately drought-tolerant and adapted to new cropping systems required for the agro-ecological transition. Here, we studied the impact of hybridity status (hybrids vs. inbred lines) on the responses to drought at the molecular and eco-physiological level exploiting publicly available datasets. Eco-physiological traits and leaf proteomes were measured in eight inbred lines and their sixteen hybrids grown in the high-throughput phenotyping platform Phenotoul-Heliaphen. Hybrids and parental lines showed different growth strategies: hybrids grew faster in the absence of water constraint and arrested their growth more abruptly than inbred lines when subjected to water deficit. We identified 471 differentially accumulated proteins, of which 256 were regulated by drought. The amplitude of up- and downregulations was greater in hybrids than in inbred lines. Our results show that hybrids respond more strongly to water deficit at the molecular and eco-physiological levels. Because of presence/absence polymorphism, hybrids potentially contain more genes than their parental inbred lines. We propose that detrimental homozygous mutations and the lower number of genes in inbred lines lead to a constitutive defense mechanism that may explain the lower growth of inbred lines under well-watered conditions and their lower reactivity to water deficit.

Funder

French National Research Agency

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Molecular Biology,Biochemistry

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