AI Article Synopsis

  • Under nitrogen limitation, plants focus more on growing roots than shoots, but how different root structures help them gather nitrogen is still unclear.
  • In a study with maize, nodal root number and root cross-sectional area showed an inverse relationship, meaning as one increased, the other decreased, regardless of nitrogen levels.
  • Maize plants with fewer, thicker nodal roots performed better in low nitrogen conditions due to their deeper rooting ability, suggesting that certain root traits might be key to improving nutrient uptake and stress adaptability in crops.

Article Abstract

Under nitrogen limitation, plants increase resource allocation to root growth relative to shoot growth. The utility of various root architectural and anatomical phenotypes for nitrogen acquisition are not well understood. Nodal root number and root cross-sectional area were evaluated in maize in field and greenhouse environments. Nodal root number and root cross-sectional area were inversely correlated under both high and low nitrogen conditions. Attenuated emergence of root nodes, as opposed to differences in the number of axial roots per node, was associated with substantially reduced root number. Greater root cross-sectional area was associated with a greater stele area and number of cortical cell files. Genotypes that produced few, thick nodal roots rather than many, thin nodal roots had deeper rooting and better shoot growth in low nitrogen environments. Fewer nodal roots offset the respiratory and nitrogen costs of thicker diameter roots, since total nodal root respiration and nitrogen content was similar for genotypes with many, thin and few, thick nodal roots. We propose that few, thick nodal roots may enable greater capture of deep soil nitrogen and improve plant performance under nitrogen stress. Synergistic interactions between an architectural and anatomical trait may be an important strategy for nitrogen acquisition. Understanding trait interactions among different root nodes has important implications in for improving crop nutrient uptake and stress tolerance.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7963125PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/pld3.310DOI Listing

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