AI Article Synopsis

  • Eutrema salsugineum is an extremophile related to Arabidopsis, and research focused on plant accessions from Yukon, Canada and Shandong, China to assess their water deficit tolerance.
  • Yukon plants wilted later than Shandong plants after a second drought period, and showed signs of osmotic adjustment with lower solute potentials post-re-watering when compared to Shandong, which returned to pre-drought levels.
  • Different metabolic responses were observed, with Yukon accumulating more glucose and Shandong more fructose, and Yukon expressed drought-responsive genes more significantly, suggesting that Yukon plants develop greater resilience to drought compared to Shandong plants, which may rely more on drought avoidance strategies.

Article Abstract

Eutrema salsugineum is an extremophile related to Arabidopsis. Accessions from Yukon, Canada and Shandong, China, were evaluated for their tolerance to water deficits. Plants were exposed to two periods of water deficit separated by an interval of re-watering and recovery. All plants took the same time to wilt during the first drought exposure but Yukon plants took 1 day longer than Shandong plants following the second drought treatment. Following re-watering and turgor recovery, solute potentials of Shandong leaves returned to predrought values while those of Yukon leaves were lower than predrought levels consistent with having undergone osmotic adjustment. Polar metabolites profiled in re-watered plants showed that different metabolites are accumulated by Yukon and Shandong plants recovering from a water deficit with glucose more abundant in Yukon and fructose in Shandong leaves. The drought-responsive expression of dehydrin genes RAB18, ERD1, RD29A and RD22 showed greater changes in transcript abundance in Yukon relative to Shandong leaves during both water deficits and recovery with the greatest difference in expression appearing during the second drought. We propose that the initial exposure of Yukon plants to drought renders them more resilient to water loss during a subsequent water deficit leading to delayed wilting. Yukon plants also established a high leaf water content and increased specific leaf area during the second deficit. Shandong plants undergoing the same treatment regime do not show the same beneficial drought tolerance responses and likely use drought avoidance to cope with water deficits.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ppl.12316DOI Listing

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