Different strategies lead to a common outcome: different water-deficit scenarios highlight physiological and biochemical strategies of water-deficit tolerance in diploid versus tetraploid Volkamer lemon

Author:

Khalid Muhammad Fasih12,Vincent Christopher2,Morillon Raphael34,Anjum Muhammad Akbar1,Ahmad Shakeel5,Hussain Sajjad1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Horticulture, Faculty of Agricultural Sciences and Technology, Bahauddin Zakariya University, Multan 60800, Pakistan

2. Horticultural Sciences Department, Citrus Research and Education Centre, Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences, University of Florida, Lake Alfred, FL 33850, USA

3. Equipe SEAPAG, UMR AGAP Institut, CIRAD, F-97170 Petit-Bourg, Guadeloupe, French West Indies

4. UMR AGAP Institut, University of Montpellier, CIRAD, INRAE, Institut Agro, F-34398 Montpellier, France

5. Department of Agronomy, Faculty of Agricultural Sciences and Technology, Bahauddin Zakariya University, Multan 60800, Pakistan

Abstract

Abstract Water scarcity restricts citrus growth and productivity worldwide. In pot conditions, tetraploid plants tolerate water deficit more than their corresponding diploids. However, their tolerance mechanisms remain elusive. In this study, we focused on which mechanisms (i.e., hydraulic, osmotic or antioxidative) confer water-deficit tolerance to tetraploids. We exposed diploid and tetraploid Volkamer lemon rootstock (Citrus volkameriana Tan. and Pasq.) to quickly (fast) and slowly (slow) developing water-deficit conditions. We evaluated their physiological, antioxidative defense and osmotic adjustment responses, and mineral distribution to leaves and roots. Water-deficit conditions decreased the photosynthetic variables of both diploid and tetraploid plants. Moreover, the corresponding decrease was greater in diploids than tetraploids. Higher concentrations of antioxidant enzymes, osmoprotectants and antioxidant capacity were found in the leaves and roots of tetraploids than diploids under water deficit. Diploid plants showed fast response in slow water-deficit condition, but that response did not persist as the deficit intensified. Meanwhile, tetraploids had lower water loss, which slowed the onset of slow water deficit relative to diploids. This response allowed stronger photosynthesis, while antioxidant and osmoprotectant production allowed for further tolerance once desiccation began. Overall, our results concluded that Volkamer lemon tetraploid plants tolerate rapid and slow water deficit by maintaining their photosynthesis due to low conductance (stem or roots), which helps to avoid desiccation, and stronger biochemical defense machinery than their corresponding diploids.

Funder

Higher Education Commission, Pakistan

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Plant Science,Physiology

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