Wheat photosystem II heat tolerance responds dynamically to short- and long-term warming

Author:

Posch Bradley C1ORCID,Hammer Julia12,Atkin Owen K1ORCID,Bramley Helen3ORCID,Ruan Yong-Ling4ORCID,Trethowan Richard35ORCID,Coast Onoriode167ORCID

Affiliation:

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

2. Department of Biology, The University of Western Ontario, 1151 Richmond St, N6A 3K7, London, Canada

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

4. Australia-China Research Centre for Crop Improvement and School of Environmental and Life Sciences, The University of Newcastle, Callaghan, NSW 2308, Australia

5. School of Life and Environmental Sciences, Plant Breeding Institute, Sydney Institute of Agriculture, The University of Sydney, Cobbitty, NSW 2570, Australia

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

7. School of Environmental and Rural Sciences, University of New England, Armidale, NSW 2351, Australia

Abstract

Abstract Wheat photosynthetic heat tolerance can be characterized using minimal chlorophyll fluorescence to quantify the critical temperature (Tcrit) above which incipient damage to the photosynthetic machinery occurs. We investigated intraspecies variation and plasticity of wheat Tcrit under elevated temperature in field and controlled-environment experiments, and assessed whether intraspecies variation mirrored interspecific patterns of global heat tolerance. In the field, wheat Tcrit varied diurnally—declining from noon through to sunrise—and increased with phenological development. Under controlled conditions, heat stress (36 °C) drove a rapid (within 2 h) rise in Tcrit that peaked after 3–4 d. The peak in Tcrit indicated an upper limit to PSII heat tolerance. A global dataset [comprising 183 Triticum and wild wheat (Aegilops) species] generated from the current study and a systematic literature review showed that wheat leaf Tcrit varied by up to 20 °C (roughly two-thirds of reported global plant interspecies variation). However, unlike global patterns of interspecies Tcrit variation that have been linked to latitude of genotype origin, intraspecific variation in wheat Tcrit was unrelated to that. Overall, the observed genotypic variation and plasticity of wheat Tcrit suggest that this trait could be useful in high-throughput phenotyping of wheat photosynthetic heat tolerance.

Funder

ARC Centre of Excellence in Plant Energy Biology

Australian Grains Research and Development Corporation (GRDC) projects Postdoctoral Fellowship: Photosynthetic Acclimation to High Temperature in Wheat

National Wheat Heat Tolerance

Australian Research Council

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Plant Science,Physiology

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