| Literature DB >> 28167033 |
Yinglong Chen1, Haimiao Wang2, Wei Hu3, Shanshan Wang4, Youhua Wang5, John L Snider6, Zhiguo Zhou7.
Abstract
Soil waterlogging events and high temperature conditions occur frequently in the Yangtze River Valley, yet the effects of these co-occurring stresses on fiber elongation have received little attention. In the current study, the combined effect of elevated temperature (ET) and soil waterlogging (SW) more negatively affected final fiber length (reduced by 5.4%-11.3%) than either stress alone by altering the composition of osmotically active solutes (sucrose, malate, and K+), where SW had the most pronounced effect. High temperature accelerated early fiber development, but limited the duration of elongation, thereby limiting final fiber length. Treatment of ET alone altered fiber sucrose content mainly through decreased source strength and the expression of the sucrose transporter gene GhSUT-1, making sucrose availability the primary determinant of final fiber length under ET. Waterlogging stress alone decreased source strength, down-regulated GhSUT-1 expression and enhanced SuSy catalytic activity for sucrose reduction. Waterlogging treatment alone also limited fiber malate production by down-regulating GhPEPC-1 & -2. However, combined elevated temperature and waterlogging limited primary cell wall synthesis by affecting GhCESAs genes and showed a negative impact on all three major osmotic solutes through the regulation of GhSUT-1, GhPEPC-1 & -2 and GhKT-1 expression and altered SuSy activity, which functioned together to produce a shorter fiber length.Entities:
Keywords: Cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.); Elevated temperature; Fiber elongation; Osmotically active solutes; SuSy; Waterlogging
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28167033 DOI: 10.1016/j.plantsci.2017.01.001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plant Sci ISSN: 0168-9452 Impact factor: 4.729