| Literature DB >> 32942703 |
Tahir Mahmood1,2, Muhammad Abdullah1,3, Sunny Ahmar1, Muhammad Yasir1, Muhammad Shahid Iqbal1,2,4, Muhmmad Yasir2, Shoaib Ur Rehman5, Sulaiman Ahmed6, Rashid Mehmood Rana1, Abdul Ghafoor7, Muhammad Kausar Nawaz Shah1, Xiongming Du2, Freddy Mora-Poblete8.
Abstract
Interrogations of local germplasm and landraces can offer a foundation and genetic basis for drought tolerance in wheat. Potential of drought tolerance in a panel of 30 wheat genotypes including varieties, local landraces, and wild crosses were explored under drought stress (DS) and well-watered (WW) conditions. Considerable variation for an osmotic adjustment (OA) and yield components, coupled with genotype and environment interaction was observed, which indicates the differential potential of wheat genotypes under both conditions. Reduction in yield per plant (YP), thousand kernel weight (TKW), and induction of OA was detected. Correlation analysis revealed a strong positive association of YP with directly contributing yield components under both environments, indicating the impotence of these traits as a selection-criteria for the screening of drought-tolerant genotypes for drylands worldwide. Subsequently, the association of OA with TKW which contributes directly to YP, indicates that wheat attains OA to extract more water from the soil under low water-potential. Genotypes including WC-4, WC-8 and LLR-29 showed more TKW under both conditions, among them; LLR-29 also has maximum OA and batter yield comparatively. Result provides insight into the role of OA in plant yield sustainability under DS. In this study, we figure out the concept of OA and its incredible role in sustainable plant yield in wheat.Entities:
Keywords: drought tolerance; grain weight; osmotic adjustment; physiological and morphological attributes; screening tools; wheat (Triticum aestivum L.); yield sustainability
Year: 2020 PMID: 32942703 PMCID: PMC7569908 DOI: 10.3390/plants9091208
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plants (Basel) ISSN: 2223-7747
Evidence of osmotic adjustment (OA) association with plant productivity and yield.
| Crop | Effects of OA on Drought Tolerance and Yield | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Wheat | Potassium, glycine betaine and proline contributors to the leaf OA under DS condition and cumulatively assist to the grain yield | [ |
| Wheat | Osmotic adjustment showed positive direct effects on shoot length, root length, fresh root weight, sugar and glycine betaine under drought stress | [ |
| Wheat | Plants with better OA capacity and high benzoxazinone content have better field yields | [ |
| Wheat | Overall, high osmoregulation increases grain yields in response to osmotic stress | [ |
| Wheat | Osmotic adjustment sustained turgor maintenance and hence the yield-forming processes during moderate and severe water stress | [ |
| Wheat | Indications of OA exist among wheat cultivars and associated with plant production under drought stress | [ |
| Wheat and barley | Higher OA was found in genotypes exhibiting high yield stability across contrasting environments. Additionally, relative water content, leaf osmotic potential, and accumulation of soluble sugars were found to be highly related to osmotic adjustment. | [ |
| Wheat | OA associated with the yield stability during the grain filling and ear growth under the DS condition | [ |
| Wheat | Plants with higher osmoregulation extract more water from the soil and produce more dry matter and grain yield | [ |
| Wheat | The yield of genotypes was 17% higher in bread wheat and 7% in durum wheat having higher OA | [ |
| Wheat | Osmotic adjustment, water use efficiency WUE, and tissue elasticity are selection tools for the improvement of wheat drought tolerance | [ |
| Wheat | The relationships suggested that direct selection for OA it may increase or decrease yield under drought but it depends on stress intensity | [ |
Figure 1Schematic concept of osmotic adjustment (OA) in plants: how drought coerces to plants for osmotic adjustment under drought stress. Under osmotic stress, plants lose their turgor pressure and water potential, the situation limits the cell activities, and overproduction of reactive oxygen species (ROS) which stimulate the accumulation of water-soluble components for OA. Osmotic adjustment promotes root growth and water extraction from the soil. It maintains the stomatal conductance and turgor pressure to restore the cell activities, photosynthesis, and finally improved plant growth and yield.
Analysis of variance (MS values) for all the traits under WW and DS conditions.
| SOV | DF | OA | PH | SL | NTL | NSLS | NGS | TKW | YP |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Treatment | 2 | 0.43 ** | 1130.02 ** | 169.80 ** | 84.54 ** | 146.95 ** | 529.78 ** | 917.28 ** | 449.28 ** |
| Genotype | 29 | 0.04 ** | 1433.06 ** | 7.51 ** | 6.18 ** | 10.95 ** | 327.63 ** | 73.64 ** | 8.93 ** |
| G x T | 58 | 0.03 ** | 97.65 NS | 2.53 ** | 0.88 ** | 4.14 | 80.75 * | 48.80 ** | 3.92 ** |
| Error | 178 | 0.002 | 76.93 | 0.79 | 0.55 | 2.77 | 15.68 | 9.61 | 2.25 |
NS = non-significant, * = Significant and ** = Significant at the 0.05.
Summary statistics and principal component squared cosines values (last 3 columns) for all traits.
| Variable | Minimum | Maximum | Mean | Std. Deviation | F1 | F2 | F3 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| OA | 0.4057 | 0.9190 | 0.6841 | 0.1258 | 0.1299 | 0.3386 | 0.4093 |
| NTL | 2.8222 | 9.5167 | 5.1142 | 1.3146 | 0.5478 | 0.1639 | 0.0078 |
| PH | 83.5444 | 140.3778 | 107.7956 | 13.7760 | 0.1402 | 0.1125 | 0.6336 |
| SL | 4.9083 | 13.5083 | 10.7098 | 1.7890 | 0.7571 | 0.0379 | 0.0274 |
| NSLS | 14.7667 | 22.1667 | 18.2166 | 1.9255 | 0.5950 | 0.0192 | 0.0197 |
| NGS | 22.4889 | 54.4889 | 40.3834 | 7.2232 | 0.2302 | 0.5697 | 0.0026 |
| TKW | 20.6670 | 47.6967 | 33.8196 | 5.3032 | 0.4800 | 0.0270 | 0.0244 |
| YP | 3.6333 | 12.2356 | 8.0751 | 2.5313 | 0.8717 | 0.0157 | 0.0014 |
Here, OA for osmotic adjustment; PH, plant height; NTL, number of tillers; SL, spike length; NSLS, number of spikelets per spike NGS, number of grains per spike; TKW, thousand kernel weight and YP Yield per plant.
Figure 2Biplot (Principal component analysis) for all traits assessed in wheat genotypes under well-watered (WW) and drought stress (DS) conditions. Scatter-plot shows the distribution of 30 wheat genotypes for OA, yield and yield components according to principal components 1 and 2 (a), components 1 and 3 (c), components 2 and 3 (d), and 3D scatter-plot of components 1, 2 and 3 (b). Here red dots represent genotypes under irrigation and green dots under stress conditions. For trait variables OA, osmotic adjustment; PH, plant height; NTL, number of tillers; SL, spike length; NSLS, number of spikelets per spike NGS, number of grains per spike; TKW, thousand kernel weight, and YP, yield per plant. Cubic Clustering Criterion is given in Supplementary Table S3.
Figure 3Correlation matrix between OA and yield traits. Left triangle (A) for WW and right (B) triangle for DS environment.
Figure 4Hierarchical Cluster (a), Constellation Plot (b) and overall correlation matrix (c) of 30 wheat genotypes assessed under WW and DS conditions. Genotypes are distributed in three major and two minor groups in the WW condition. In contrast, genotypes evaluated under DS condition are distributed in four major and 5 minor groups. Here, red color denoted to WW and green to DS. The major and minor groups are classified as having genotypes >6 and >3 respectively.
Thousand kernel weight (TKW) variability estimation model obtained by ridge regression along with estimated regression and R square values.
| Environment | R.P Value | NGS | NTL | PH | SL | NSLS | YP | OA | R2 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| WW | 0.3 | 0.065651 | −0.91773 | 0.075970 | 0.391445 | −1.10072 | 0.91381 | 10.4632 | 37.69% |
| DS | 0.4 | 0.054466 | −0.81762 | 0.070063 | 0.356197 | −0.979303 | 0.878935 | 10.1628 | 54.54% |
R.P Value = Ridge parameter value, R2 = R—Squared values in percentage.