| Literature DB >> 31139199 |
Keshav Dahal1, Xiu-Qing Li1, Helen Tai1, Alexa Creelman1, Benoit Bizimungu1.
Abstract
Global climate change in the form of extreme heat and drought poses a major challenge to sustainable crop production by negatively affecting plant performance and crop yield. Such negative impact on crop yield is likely to be aggravated in future because continued greenhouse gas emissions will cause further rise in temperature leading to increased evapo-transpiration and drought severity, soil salinity as well as insect and disease threats. This has raised a major challenge for plant scientists on securing global food demand, which urges an immediate need to enhance the current yield of major food crops by two-fold to feed the increasing population. As a fourth major food crop, enhancing potato productivity is important for food security of an increasing population. However, potato plant is highly prone to high temperature, drought, soil salinity, as well as insect and diseases. In order to maintain a sustainable potato production, we must adapt our cultivation practices and develop stress tolerant potato cultivars that are appropriately engineered for changing environment. Yet the lack of data on the underlying mechanisms of potato plant resistance to abiotic and biotic stress and the ability to predict future outcomes constitutes a major knowledge gap. It is a challenge for plant scientists to pinpoint means of improving tuber yield under increasing CO2, high temperature and drought stress including the changing patterns of pest and pathogen infestations. Understanding stress-related physiological, biochemical and molecular processes is crucial to develop screening procedures for selecting crop cultivars that can better adapt to changing growth conditions. Elucidation of such mechanism may offer new insights into the identification of specific characteristics that may be useful in breeding new cultivars aimed at maintaining or even enhancing potato yield under changing climate. This paper discusses the recent progress on the mechanism by which potato plants initially sense the changes in their surrounding CO2, temperature, water status, soil salinity and consequently respond to these changes at the molecular, biochemical and physiological levels. We suggest that future research needs to be concentrated on the identification and characterization of signaling molecules and target genes regulating stress tolerance and crop yield potential.Entities:
Keywords: drought; high CO2; high temperature; photosynthetic yield potential; potato; salinity; stress tolerance; yield
Year: 2019 PMID: 31139199 PMCID: PMC6527881 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2019.00563
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 5.753
FIGURE 1A schematic diagram illustrating the photosynthetic carbon assimilation and its export to the potato tuber sink. In the chloroplast, light harvesting complexes absorb sunlight and generate ATP and NADPH through photosynthetic electron transport chain. The ATP and NADPH are then consumed by Calvin cycle to assimilate carbon to simple carbohydrate, triose phosphates (triose-P). Triose-P is either used to synthesize starch in the chloroplast or exported to cytosol in exchange for Pi through triose-P/Pi translocator. In the cytosol, the triose-P is then converted to sucrose via hexose phosphates using key sucrose biosynthetic enzymes, cFBpase and SPS. Sucrose is then transported to the sink (tuber), where it is converted to starch by AGPase. The synthesis of sucrose in the cytosol generates Pi which is exported to the chloroplast in the exchange for triose-P. Any stress that inhibit sucrose synthesis and its transport to sink (tuber) results in the feedback inhibition of photosynthesis due to Pi regeneration limitation. The broken arrows indicate the stress sensitive processes. RuBisCO, ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase; RuBP, ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate; TPT, triose phosphate translocator; cFBPase, cytosolic fructose bisphosphatase; SPS, sucrose phosphate synthase, AGPase: ADP glucose pyrophosphorylase. Modified from Hüner et al. (2016).
FIGURE 2A simplified model for the processes involved in the conversion of solar incident energy to final plant biomass and associated energy losses. Out of 100% solar incident energy the C3 photosynthetic organisms are capable of converting only 4.6% to final plant biomass, suggesting a maximum theoretical energy conversion efficiency of 0.046. Most portion of solar energy is lost resulting in considerable decrease in energy conversion efficiency between the solar energy and final plant biomass. Redrawn from Zhu et al. (2008, 2010); and modified based on Dahal et al. (2014a,b).
Summary of the effects of elevated CO2, drought, high temperature and salinity on physiological, morphological and molecular characteristics of potato and acclimation/adaptation strategies.
| Responses to change in the growth environment | Acclimation/ Adaptation strategies | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Morphological | Physiological | Molecular | ||
| High CO2 | • Increased plant biomass | • Increased photosynthesis | • Down-regulation of key | • Stomatal closure |
| • Resource remobilization particularly nitrogen in plant | ||||
| • Increased tuber yield | • Changed respiration rates | • photosynthetic enzyme activities particularly RuBisCO. | ||
| • Changed photorespiration rates | ||||
| • Decreased RuBisCO activity | ||||
| • Increased LAI | ||||
| • Reduced stomatal conductance | ||||
| • Increased leaf DM content | ||||
| • Reduced transpiration rates | ||||
| • Increased water use efficiency | ||||
| • Accumulation of non-soluble carbohydrates. | ||||
| • Increased leaf nitrogen content | ||||
| Drought | • Reduced plant growth | • Declined photosynthesis | • Up-regulation of drought-responsive gene expression | • Stomatal closure |
| • Changed respiration rates | • Increased root to shoot ratio. | |||
| • Reduced plant biomass | ||||
| • Increased ABA synthesis | ||||
| • Down-regulation of key photosynthetic gene expression | ||||
| • Reduced chlorophyll content | • Increased osmolyte content. | |||
| • Reduced tuber yield | • Reduced internal CO2 concentrations | • Reduced activities of key photosynthetic enzymes. | • Increased synthesis of drought-related proteins, | |
| • Reduced stolon and tuber number | • Reduced transpiration rates | |||
| • Increased activities of starch degrading enzymes | • Narrower leaf with hair. | |||
| • Starch mobilization to reducing sugars | ||||
| • Increased anti-oxidant | ||||
| • Reduced LAI | ||||
| • Tuber develops sugar ends | ||||
| • Increased glycoalkaloids | ||||
| • Increased leaf DM content | ||||
| • Tuber develops malformations (hollow heart, cracking and secondary growth) | ||||
| • Shorter plant height | ||||
| • Increased root to shoot ratio | ||||
| • Tuber develops internal brown spot | ||||
| • Delayed tuberization | ||||
| • Early senescence | ||||
| High temperature | • Reduced plant growth | • Declined photosynthesis | • Increased activities of starch degrading enzymes | Increased synthesis of heat-shock proteins |
| • Reduced tuber yield | • Reduced photosystem II activity | |||
| • Increased transpiration | ||||
| • Increased leaf DM content | • Reduced sucrose translocation to tubers. | |||
| • Decreased tuber DM content | • Starch mobilization to reducing sugars | |||
| • Tuber develops sugar ends | ||||
| • Delayed tuberization | ||||
| • Tuber develops malformations (hollow heart, cracking and secondary growth) | ||||
| • Tuber develops necrosis | ||||
| • Tuber develops field sprouting | ||||
| Salinity | • Reduced plant emergence | • Declined photosynthesis | • Increased activity of transmembrane transport proteins involved in Na+ transport to vacuole | • Stomatal closure |
| • Reduced transpiration rates | • Increased ABA | |||
| • Reduced root length and volume | • Increased proline | |||
| • Increased Na+ transport across the tonoplast in exchange for H+ | ||||
| • Reduced leaf water content | ||||
| Early haulm senescence | ||||
| • Reduced activities of nitrate reductase | ||||
| • Increased activity of antioxidant enzymes; ascorbate peroxidise, catalase, glutathione reductase and hydrogen peroxide | ||||
| • Reduced leaf osmotic potential | ||||
| • Down-regulation of genes coding for Photosystem I, Photosystem II and chlorophyll synthesis proteins | ||||
| • Reduced shoot biomass | • Increased total soluble solids | |||
| Increased lipid peroxidation | ||||
| • Reduced tuber growth | ||||
| • Change in chloroplast ultra-structure | ||||
| • Increased leaf carbohydrate content | ||||
| • Decreased tuber DM content | ||||
| • Reduced tuber nitrogen content | • Change in gene expression related to carbohydrate and amino acid metabolism | |||
| • Reduced tuber number | ||||
| • Reduced tuber yield | ||||