Author:
Batool Asfa,Li Shi-Sheng,Yue Dong-Xia,Ullah Fazal,Zhao Ling,Cheng Zheng-Guo,Wang Chao,Duan Hai-Xia,Lv Guang-Chao,Haq Zeeshan ul,Ahmed Khalil,Gui Yan-Wen,Zhu Li,Xiao Yun-Li,Xiong You-Cai
Abstract
AbstractNon-hydraulic root source signaling (nHRS) is a unique positive response to soil drying in the regulation of plant growth and development. However, it is unclear how the nHRS mediates the tradeoff between source and sink at the late growth stages and its adaptive mechanisms in primitive wheat. To address this issue, a root-splitting design was made by inserting solid partition in the middle of the pot culture to induce the occurrence of nHRS using four wheat cultivars (MO1 and MO4, diploid; DM22 and DM31, tetraploid) as materials. Three water treatments were designed as 1) both halves watered (CK), 2) holistic root system watered then droughted (FS), 3) one-half of the root system watered and half droughted (PS). FS and PS were designed to compare the role of the full root system and split root system to induce nHRS. Leaves samples were collected during booting and anthesis to compare the role of nHRS at both growth stages. The data indicated that under PS treatment, ABA concentration was significantly higher than FS and CK, demonstrating the induction of nHRS in split root design and nHRS decreased cytokinin (ZR) levels, particularly in the PS treatment. Soluble sugar and proline accumulation were higher in the anthesis stage as compared to the booting stage. POD activity was higher at anthesis, while CAT was higher at the booting stage. Increased ABA (nHRS) correlated with source-sink relationships and metabolic rate (i.e., leaf) connecting other stress signals. Biomass density showed superior resource acquisition and utilization capabilities in both FS and PS treatment as compared to CK in all plants. Our findings indicate that nHRS-induced alterations in phytohormones and their effect on source-sink relations were allied with the growth stages in primitive wheat.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference61 articles.
1. Tatar Ö, Brück H, Asch F. Atmospheric and soil water deficit induced changes in chemical and hydraulic signals in wheat ( Triticum aestivum L.). J Agron Crop Sci. 2022;209(2):242–50.
2. Batool A, Akram NA, Lv GC, Xiong JL, Tian T, Wang J, Cheng ZG, Yi Y, Wen J, Xiong YC. Root-to-shoot communication and its signal cross talk in plants: a physiological and agronomic perspective. Pak J Bot. 2018;50(5):2059–67.
3. Lei G, Zeng W, Huu Nguyen T, Zeng J, Chen H, Kumar Srivastava A, Gaiser T, Wu J, Huang J. Relating soil-root hydraulic resistance variation to stomatal regulation in soil-plant water transport modeling. J Hydrol. 2023;617:128879.
4. Xiong YC, Li FM, Xu BC, Hodgkinson KC. Hydraulic and non-hydraulic root-sourced signals in old and modern spring wheat cultivars in a semiarid area. J Plant Growth Regul. 2006;25(2):120–36.
5. Chen K, Li GJ, Bressan RA, Song CP, Zhu JK, Zhao Y. Abscisic acid dynamics, signaling, and functions in plants. J Integr Plant Biol. 2020;62(1):25–54.
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献