4.7 Article

Modifying root-to-shoot ratio improves root water influxes in wheat under drought stress

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BOTANY
Volume 73, Issue 5, Pages 1643-1654

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/jxb/erab500

Keywords

Drought stress; gas exchange; root influx; transpiration; VPD; wild emmer wheat

Categories

Funding

  1. State of Israel Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development [20-10-0066, 12-01-0005]
  2. U.S. Agency for International Development Middle East Research and Cooperation [M34-037]
  3. Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs

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The intensity of drought experienced by plants is influenced by factors such as soil moisture and atmospheric variables. While the role of shoot architecture in relation to these factors is well understood, the extent to which shoot and root dynamic interactions are controlled by genotypic variation is less clear. Wild emmer wheat alleles mediate water influx continuum and transpiration efficiency as a response mechanism to the atmospheric state under drought stress.
Drought intensity as experienced by plants depends upon soil moisture status and atmospheric variables such as temperature, radiation, and air vapour pressure deficit. Although the role of shoot architecture with these edaphic and atmospheric factors is well characterized, the extent to which shoot and root dynamic interactions as a continuum are controlled by genotypic variation is less well known. Here, we targeted these interactions using a wild emmer wheat introgression line (IL20) with a distinct drought-induced shift in the shoot-to-root ratio and its drought-sensitive recurrent parent Svevo. Using a gravimetric platform, we show that IL20 maintained higher root water influx and gas exchange under drought stress, which supported a greater growth. Interestingly, the advantage of IL20 in root water influx and transpiration was expressed earlier during the daily diurnal cycle under lower vapour pressure deficit and therefore supported higher transpiration efficiency. Application of a structural equation model indicates that under drought, vapour pressure deficit and radiation are antagonistic to transpiration rate, whereas the root water influx operates as a feedback for the higher atmospheric responsiveness of leaves. Collectively, our results suggest that a drought-induced shift in root-to-shoot ratio can improve plant water uptake potential in a short preferable time window during early morning when vapour pressure deficit is low and the light intensity is not a limiting factor for assimilation. Adaptive wild emmer wheat alleles mediate water influx continuum and transpiration efficiency as a response mechanism to the atmospheric state under drought stress.

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