| Literature DB >> 32082405 |
Jessica Schmidt1, Joelle Claussen2, Norbert Wörlein2, Anja Eggert2, Delphine Fleury1,3, Trevor Garnett1, Stefan Gerth2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Improving abiotic stress tolerance in wheat requires large scale screening of yield components such as seed weight, seed number and single seed weight, all of which is very laborious, and a detailed analysis of seed morphology is time-consuming and visually often impossible. Computed tomography offers the opportunity for much faster and more accurate assessment of yield components.Entities:
Keywords: Genetic diversity; High-throughput; Phenotyping; Seed morphology; X-ray; Yield
Year: 2020 PMID: 32082405 PMCID: PMC7017466 DOI: 10.1186/s13007-020-00565-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plant Methods ISSN: 1746-4811 Impact factor: 4.993
Fig. 1Reconstruction of wheat ears. a Virtual cross-section of the three-dimensional reconstruction of two wheat ears subjected to drought (left) and combined drought and heat (right) stress. b 2D representation of each seed at its maximum diameter of one ear
Fig. 2Predictions of seed weight and seed number per ear. Comparison of a virtual total seed weight per ear with actual total seed weight per ear and b comparison of virtual seed number per ear (seeds > 2.0 mm) with actual seed number of per ear. Under drought, 125 out of the 143 plants produced seeds above 2.0 mm, under combined drought and heat only 38 out of the 148 plants produced seeds of > 2.0 mm of size. r2, correlation coefficient
Fig. 3Virtually measured seed set characteristics under drought and combined drought and heat treatment. Mean attenuation mean value are representing the physical density of the seeds. Seed set characteristics were measured for each seed individually and subsequently averaged per ear. Drought: n = 143; drought and heat: n = 148. *, **, ***, ****Indicate p ≤ 0.05, 0.01, 0.001 and 0.0001, respectively. Ns not significant
Fig. 4Seed morphology analysis. a Virtual spherical ratio versus virtual seed volume of single seeds under drought and drought and heat stress. b 3D reconstruction of a seed under drought stress with a length of 4.9 mm (left) and drought and heat stress with a length of 3.7 mm (right)
Fig. 5Virtual seed weight in relation to position in ear. 0 marks the first seed detected at the bottom of the ear including big (seed size > 2.0 mm) and small seeds (seed size < 2.0 mm) and 1 the last seed detected at the top of the ear. For illustration, a wheat ear subjected to drought (green background) and to drought and heat (orange background) are attached. Drought: n = 143; drought and heat: n = 148