Photosynthesis in newly developed leaves of heat-tolerant wheat acclimates to long-term nocturnal warming

Author:

Coast Onoriode123ORCID,Scafaro Andrew P14ORCID,Bramley Helen5ORCID,Taylor Nicolas L6ORCID,Atkin Owen K14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. ARC Centre of Excellence in Plant Energy Biology, Research School of Biology, The Australian National University , Canberra, ACT 2601 , Australia

2. Natural Resources Institute, University of Greenwich , Central Avenue, Chatham Maritime, Kent ME4 4TB , UK

3. School of Environmental and Rural Sciences, Faculty of Science, Agriculture, Business, and Law, University of New England , Armidale, NSW 2351 , Australia

4. Division of Plant Science, Research School of Biology, The Australian National University , Canberra, ACT 2601 , Australia

5. School of Life and Environmental Sciences, Plant Breeding Institute, Sydney Institute of Agriculture, The University of Sydney , Narrabri, NSW 2390 , Australia

6. ARC Centre of Excellence in Plant Energy Biology, School of Molecular Sciences and Institute of Agriculture, The University of Western Australia , Crawley, WA 6009 , Australia

Abstract

Abstract We examined photosynthetic traits of pre-existing and newly developed flag leaves of four wheat genotypes grown in controlled-environment experiments. In newly developed leaves, acclimation of the maximum rate of net CO2 assimilation (An) to warm nights (i.e. increased An) was associated with increased capacity of Rubisco carboxylation and photosynthetic electron transport, with Rubisco activation state probably contributing to increased Rubisco activity. Metabolite profiling linked acclimation of An to greater accumulation of monosaccharides and saturated fatty acids in leaves; these changes suggest roles for osmotic adjustment of leaf turgor pressure and maintenance of cell membrane integrity. By contrast, where An decreased under warm nights, the decline was related to lower stomatal conductance and rates of photosynthetic electron transport. Decreases in An occurred despite higher basal PSII thermal stability in all genotypes exposed to warm nights: Tcrit of 45–46.5 °C in non-acclimated versus 43.8–45 °C in acclimated leaves. Pre-existing leaves showed no change in An–temperature response curves, except for an elite heat-tolerant genotype. These findings illustrate the impact of night-time warming on the ability of wheat plants to photosynthesize during the day, thereby contributing to explain the impact of global warming on crop productivity.

Funder

ARC Centre of Excellence in Plant Energy Biology

Australian Grains Research and Development Corporation

A national approach to improving heat tolerance in wheat through more efficient carbon allocation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Plant Science,Physiology

Reference125 articles.

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