4.5 Article

Complementary Phenotyping of Maize Root System Architecture by Root Pulling Force and X-Ray Imaging

Journal

PLANT PHENOMICS
Volume 2021, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.34133/2021/9859254

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Department of Energy [DE-AR0000826]
  2. National Science Foundation [IOS-1638507]
  3. U.S. Department of Agriculture [2018-67012-28084]

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The study utilized X-ray computed tomography to create accurate 3D models of maize root crowns and developed computational pipelines capable of measuring 71 features, improving estimates of genetic contribution to root system architecture and detecting subtle changes in root distributions. The research demonstrated that root pulling force, associated with multiple 3D traits, can be used across various experimental contexts or in large genetic studies of root system architecture.
The root system is critical for the survival of nearly all land plants and a key target for improving abiotic stress tolerance, nutrient accumulation, and yield in crop species. Although many methods of root phenotyping exist, within field studies, one of the most popular methods is the extraction and measurement of the upper portion of the root system, known as the root crown, followed by trait quantification based on manual measurements or 2D imaging. However, 2D techniques are inherently limited by the information available from single points of view. Here, we used X-ray computed tomography to generate highly accurate 3D models of maize root crowns and created computational pipelines capable of measuring 71 features from each sample. This approach improves estimates of the genetic contribution to root system architecture and is refined enough to detect various changes in global root system architecture over developmental time as well as more subtle changes in root distributions as a result of environmental differences. We demonstrate that root pulling force, a high-throughput method of root extraction that provides an estimate of root mass, is associated with multiple 3D traits from our pipeline. Our combined methodology can therefore be used to calibrate and interpret root pulling force measurements across a range of experimental contexts or scaled up as a stand-alone approach in large genetic studies of root system architecture.

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