Stomatal CO2 responses at sub- and above-ambient CO2 levels employ different pathways in Arabidopsis

Author:

Koolmeister Kaspar12ORCID,Merilo Ebe1ORCID,Hõrak Hanna1ORCID,Kollist Hannes23ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Technology, University of Tartu , Nooruse 1, Tartu 50411 , Estonia

2. Institute of Bioengineering, University of Tartu , Nooruse 1, Tartu 50411 , Estonia

3. Université Paris-Saclay, CNRS, INRAE, Université Evry, Université Paris Cité, Institute of Plant Sciences Paris-Saclay (IPS2) , 91190 Gif sur Yvette , France

Abstract

Abstract Stomatal pores that control plant CO2 uptake and water loss affect global carbon and water cycles. In the era of increasing atmospheric CO2 levels and vapor pressure deficit (VPD), it is essential to understand how these stimuli affect stomatal behavior. Whether stomatal responses to sub-ambient and above-ambient CO2 levels are governed by the same regulators and depend on VPD remains unknown. We studied stomatal conductance responses in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) stomatal signaling mutants under conditions where CO2 levels were either increased from sub-ambient to ambient (400 ppm) or from ambient to above-ambient levels under normal or elevated VPD. We found that guard cell signaling components involved in CO2-induced stomatal closure have different roles in the sub-ambient and above-ambient CO2 levels. The CO2-specific regulators prominently affected sub-ambient CO2 responses, whereas the lack of guard cell slow-type anion channel SLOW ANION CHANNEL-ASSOCIATED 1 (SLAC1) more strongly affected the speed of above-ambient CO2-induced stomatal closure. Elevated VPD caused lower stomatal conductance in all studied genotypes and CO2 transitions, as well as faster CO2-responsiveness in some studied genotypes and CO2 transitions. Our results highlight the importance of experimental setups in interpreting stomatal CO2-responsiveness, as stomatal movements under different CO2 concentration ranges are controlled by distinct mechanisms. Elevated CO2 and VPD responses may also interact. Hence, multi-factor treatments are needed to understand how plants integrate different environmental signals and translate them into stomatal responses.

Funder

Estonian Research Council

Institute of Technology

Estonian Research Infrastructure Roadmap project TAIM

European Regional Development Fund

Center of Excellence in Molecular Cell Engineering

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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