Hydraulic conductivity and contribution of aquaporins to water uptake in roots of four sunflower genotypes
Background This article evaluates the potential of intraspecific variation for whole-root hydraulic properties in sunflower. We investigated genotypic differences related to root water transport in four genotypes selected because of their differing water use efficiency (JAC doi: 10.1111/jac.12079. 2...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Botanical studies 2014-10, Vol.55 (1), p.75-8, Article 75 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Background
This article evaluates the potential of intraspecific variation for whole-root hydraulic properties in sunflower. We investigated genotypic differences related to root water transport in four genotypes selected because of their differing water use efficiency (JAC doi: 10.1111/jac.12079. 2014). We used a pressure-flux approach to characterize hydraulic conductance (
L
0
) which reflects the overall water uptake capacity of the roots and hydraulic conductivity (
Lp
r
) which represents the root intrinsic water permeability on an area basis. The contribution of aquaporins (AQPs) to water uptake was explored using mercuric chloride (HgCl
2
), a general AQP blocker.
Results
There were considerable variations in root morphology between genotypes. Mean values of
L
0
and
Lp
r
showed significant variation (above 60% in both cases) between recombinant inbred lines in control plants. Pressure-induced sap flow was strongly inhibited by HgCl
2
treatment in all genotypes (more than 50%) and contribution of AQPs to hydraulic conductivity varied between genotypes. Treated root systems displayed markedly different
L
0
values between genotypes whereas
Lp
r
values were similar.
Conclusions
Our analysis points to marked differences between genotypes in the intrinsic aquaporin-dependent path (
Lp
r
in control plants) but not in the intrinsic AQP-independent paths (
Lp
r
in HgCl
2
treated plants). Overall, root anatomy was a major determinant of water transport properties of the whole organ and can compensate for a low AQP contribution. Hydraulic properties of root tissues and organs might have to be taken into account for plant breeding since they appear to play a key role in sunflower water balance and water use efficiency. |
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ISSN: | 1817-406X 1999-3110 1999-3110 |
DOI: | 10.1186/s40529-014-0075-1 |