4.7 Article

Physiological Adaptation Mechanisms to Drought and Rewatering in Water-Saving and Drought-Resistant Rice

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms232214043

Keywords

rice; drought stress; photosynthetic physiology; antioxidant enzymes; osmoregulatory substances

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [32272205, 32071946]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Anhui Province [1908085MC67]
  3. Natural Science Foundation of Anhui Provincial Education Office [KJ2021A0201]

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Water-saving and drought-resistant rice (WDR) has a simplified adaptation mechanism to protect the photosynthetic apparatus from damage under drought and rehydration conditions. High peroxidase activity and abundant soluble protein content are important physiological bases for maintaining high photosynthetic production potential in WDR.
Water-saving and drought-resistant rice (WDR) has high a yield potential in drought. However, the photosynthetic adaptation mechanisms of WDR to drought and rehydration have yet to be conclusively determined. Hanyou 73 (HY73, WDR) and Huanghuazhan (HHZ, drought-sensitive cultivar) rice cultivars were subjected to drought stress and rewatering when the soil water potential was -180 KPa in the booting stage. The leaf physiological characteristics were dynamically determined at 0 KPa, -30 KPa, -70 KPa, -180 KPa, the first, the fifth, and the tenth day after rewatering. It was found that the maximum net photosynthetic rate (A(max)) and light saturation point were decreased under drought conditions in both cultivars. The change in dark respiration rate (R-d) in HY73 was not significant, but was markedly different in HHZ. After rewatering, the photosynthetic parameters of HY73 completely returned to the initial state, while the indices in HHZ did not recover. The antioxidant enzyme activities and osmoregulatory substance levels increased with worsening drought conditions and decreased with rewatering duration. HY73 had higher peroxidase (POD) activity as well as proline levels, and lower catalase (CAT) activity, ascorbate peroxidase (APX) activity, malondialdehyde (MDA) level, and soluble protein (SP) content during all of the assessment periods compared with HHZ. In addition, A(max) was markedly negatively correlated with superoxide dismutase (SOD), POD, CAT, and SP in HY73 (p < 0.001), while in HHZ, it was negatively correlated with SOD, CAT, APX, MDA, Pro, and SP, and positively correlated with R-d (p < 0.001). These results suggest that WDR has a more simplified adaptation mechanism to protect photosynthetic apparatus from damage in drought and rehydration compared with drought-sensitive cultivars. The high POD activity and great SP content would be considered as important physiological bases to maintain high photosynthetic production potential in WDR.

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