| Literature DB >> 31990995 |
Ole Pedersen1,2, Yohei Nakayama3, Hiroki Yasue3, Yusuke Kurokawa3, Hirokazu Takahashi3, Anja Heidi Floytrup1, Fumie Omori4, Yoshiro Mano4, Timothy David Colmer2, Mikio Nakazono2,3.
Abstract
Plants typically respond to waterlogging by producing new adventitious roots with aerenchyma and many wetland plants form a root barrier to radial O2 loss (ROL), but it was not known if this was also the case for lateral roots. We tested the hypothesis that lateral roots arising from adventitious roots can form a ROL barrier, using root-sleeving electrodes and O2 microsensors to assess ROL of Zea nicaraguensis, the maize (Zea mays ssp. mays) introgression line with a locus for ROL barrier formation (introgression line (IL) #468) from Z. nicaraguensis and a maize inbred line (Mi29). Lateral roots of Z. nicaraguensis and IL #468 both formed a ROL barrier under stagnant, deoxygenated conditions, whereas Mi29 did not. Lateral roots of Z. nicaraguensis had higher tissue O2 status than for IL #468 and Mi29. The ROL barrier was visible as suberin in the root hypodermis/exodermis. Modelling showed that laterals roots can grow to a maximum length of 74 mm with a ROL barrier, but only to 33 mm without a barrier. Presence of a ROL barrier in lateral roots requires reconsideration of the role of these roots as sites of O2 loss, which for some species now appears to be less than hitherto thought.Entities:
Keywords: ROL; aerenchyma; crop wild relative; hypoxia; maize (Zea mays ssp. mays); root internal aeration; root respiration; soil waterlogging or flooding
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Year: 2020 PMID: 31990995 DOI: 10.1111/nph.16452
Source DB: PubMed Journal: New Phytol ISSN: 0028-646X Impact factor: 10.151