» Articles » PMID: 32777163

Rapid Temperature Responses of Photosystem II Efficiency Forecast Genotypic Variation in Rice Vegetative Heat Tolerance

Overview
Journal Plant J
Date 2020 Aug 11
PMID 32777163
Citations 18
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

A key target for the improvement of Oryza sativa (rice) is the development of heat-tolerant varieties. This necessitates the development of high-throughput methodologies for the screening of heat tolerance. Progress has been made to this end via visual scoring and chlorophyll fluorescence; however, these approaches demand large infrastructural investments to expose large populations of adult plants to heat stress. To address this bottleneck, we investigated the response of the maximum quantum efficiency of photosystem II (PSII) to rapidly increasing temperatures in excised leaf segments of juvenile rice plants. Segmented models explained the majority of the observed variation in response. Coefficients from these models, i.e. critical temperature (T ) and the initial response (m ), were evaluated for their usability for forecasting adult heat tolerance, measured as the vegetative heat tolerance of adult rice plants through visual (stay-green) and chlorophyll fluorescence (ɸPSII) approaches. We detected substantial variation in heat tolerance of a randomly selected set of indica rice varieties. Both T and m were associated with measured heat tolerance in adult plants, highlighting their usability as high-throughput proxies. Variation in heat tolerance was associated with daytime respiration but not with photosynthetic capacity, highlighting a role for the non-photorespiratory release of CO in heat tolerance. To date, this represents the first published instance of genetic variation in these key gas-exchange traits being quantified in response to heat stress in a diverse set of rice accessions. These results outline an efficient strategy for screening heat tolerance and accentuate the need to focus on reduced rates of respiration to improve heat tolerance in rice.

Citing Articles

Responses of 'Flordaguard' and 'MP-29' spp. rootstocks to hypoxia and high root zone temperature.

Richmond-Cosie L, Schaffer B, Shahid M, Chaparro J, Sarkhosh A Plant Environ Interact. 2024; 5(5):e70007.

PMID: 39403108 PMC: 11472804. DOI: 10.1002/pei3.70007.


Heat stress tolerance in wheat seedling: Clustering genotypes and identifying key traits using multivariate analysis.

Hasan M, Mia M, Ahmed J, Karim M, Islam A, Mohi-Ud-Din M Heliyon. 2024; 10(19):e38623.

PMID: 39397944 PMC: 11470501. DOI: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2024.e38623.


Exploring natural genetic diversity in a bread wheat multi-founder population: dual imaging of photosynthesis and stomatal kinetics.

Faralli M, Mellers G, Wall S, Vialet-Chabrand S, Forget G, Galle A J Exp Bot. 2024; 75(21):6733-6747.

PMID: 38795361 PMC: 11565207. DOI: 10.1093/jxb/erae233.


Early-Stage Detection of Biotic and Abiotic Stress on Plants by Chlorophyll Fluorescence Imaging Analysis.

Moustaka J, Moustakas M Biosensors (Basel). 2023; 13(8).

PMID: 37622882 PMC: 10452221. DOI: 10.3390/bios13080796.


Excised leaves show limited and species-specific effects on photosynthetic parameters across crop functional types.

Ferguson J, Jithesh T, Lawson T, Kromdijk J J Exp Bot. 2023; 74(21):6662-6676.

PMID: 37565685 PMC: 10662226. DOI: 10.1093/jxb/erad319.