| Literature DB >> 32026944 |
Darren C Plett1, Kosala Ranathunge2, Vanessa J Melino1, Noriyuki Kuya3, Yusaku Uga3, Herbert J Kronzucker1,4.
Abstract
Water and nitrogen availability limit crop productivity globally more than most other environmental factors. Plant availability of macronutrients such as nitrate is, to a large extent, regulated by the amount of water available in the soil, and, during drought episodes, crops can become simultaneously water and nitrogen limited. In this review, we explore the intricate relationship between water and nitrogen transport in plants, from transpiration-driven mass flow in the soil to uptake by roots via membrane transporters and channels and transport to aerial organs. We discuss the roles of root architecture and of suberized hydrophobic root barriers governing apoplastic water and nitrogen movement into the vascular system. We also highlight the need to identify the signalling cascades regulating water and nitrogen transport, as well as the need for targeted physiological analyses of plant traits influencing water and nitrogen uptake. We further advocate for incorporation of new phenotyping technologies, breeding strategies, and agronomic practices to improve crop yield in water- and nitrogen-limited production systems.Entities:
Keywords: zzm321990 DRO1zzm321990 ; Ammonium; aquaporins; nitrate; nitrogen transport; phenotyping; root architecture; root barriers; suberin; water transport
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32026944 PMCID: PMC7382376 DOI: 10.1093/jxb/eraa049
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Bot ISSN: 0022-0957 Impact factor: 6.992
Fig. 1.The putative impact of water and N supply on the development of plant root barriers. The outer and inner rings represent the exodermal and endodermal cell layers, respectively. The matrix represents the combinations of different water availability (columns) and different N sources and supplies (rows). Darker rings indicate induced root barriers which have increased suberin and lignin depositions in the cell walls, decreasing apoplastic water and N transport, while the reverse is depicted by lighter rings. The effect of N (left) and water (right) supply is represented on opposite sides of each ring. Future work must address whether an increase in barrier development influences N and water transport similarly, in particular where available water and N are having opposite influences on barrier development (e.g. low NH4+ combined with water stress, as depicted in the bottom right of the figure).
Fig. 2.The importance of timing N application with water availability in dryland agriculture. Five stages of cereal crop development are represented in each panel. Arrows represent rainfall events (blue) and N applications (orange). Soil water (blue) and N (orange) for each development stage are represented by boxes beneath each developmental stage, indicating high water or N (dark), or reduced water or N (light). Size of plants and number of grains on each spike represent actual biomass and grain production of plants in each situation. Relative grain yields and protein content are provided for each of the four growth seasons. (A) A season with regular rainfall events; (B) a season with few rainfall events during vegetative growth, but regular rainfall during reproductive growth; (C) a season with regular rainfall events during vegetative growth, but few rainfall events during reproductive growth; (D) a ‘drought’ season with few rainfall events.
Fig. 3.A plant metabolic link between adaption to drought and reduced N stress. Allantoin catabolism is restricted in drought-stressed plants. Allantoin accumulation both induces de novo synthesis of ABA and activates ABA from the inactive glycosylated form. Regulation of these processes may prevent loss of N as NH3 gas when carbon skeletons are in short supply. In contrast, under low N conditions, allantoin is catabolized (Melino ) and recycled to NH3 which can be reduced by N-assimilatory enzymes or instead serve as a cheap N storage form for translocation to the grain where it represents a significant portion of the soluble N pool (Casartelli ).
Fig. 4.The beneficial impacts of deeper roots on water and N uptake in rice. Dro1-NIL has deeper rooting compared with the IR64 parental lowland cultivar. (A) The DRO1 locus allows rice roots to explore deeper subsoil for water in a drought that IR64 cannot access, allowing Dro1-NIL to continue to grow and produce grain in drought seasons. (B) The deeper roots of Dro1-NIL allow the plants to access NH4+ in deeper subsoils, meaning the plants can access N later in the growing season to improve grain yield and quality as compared with IR64.