4.7 Article

Endogenous Ethylene Concentration Is Not a Major Determinant of Fruit Abscission in Heat-Stressed Cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.)

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PLANT SCIENCE
Volume 8, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2017.01615

Keywords

elevated temperature; ethylene manipulation; heat shock; photosynthesis; pollen germination

Categories

Funding

  1. Cruiser R and D fund
  2. Syngenta Crop Protection Australia
  3. University of Sydney, Australia
  4. Higher Education Commission of Pakistan through International Research Support Initiative Program (IRSIP)
  5. Cotton Seed Distributors

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We investigated the role of ethylene in the response of cotton to high temperature using cotton genotypes with genetically interrupted ethylene metabolism. In the first experiment, Sicot 71BRF and 5B (a lintless variant with compromised ethylene metabolism) were exposed to 45 degrees C, either by instantaneous heat shock or by ramping temperatures by 3 degrees C daily for 1 week. One day prior to the start of heat treatment, half the plants were sprayed with 0.8mM of the ethylene synthesis inhibitor, aminoethoxyvinylglycine (AVG). In a subsequent experiment, Sicot 71BRF and a putatively heat-tolerant line, CIM 448, were exposed to 36 or 45 degrees C for 1 week, and half the plants were sprayed with 20 mu M of the ethylene precursor, 1-aminocyclopropane1- carboxylic acid, (ACC). High temperature exposure of plants in both experiments was performed at the peak reproductive phase (65-68 days after sowing). Elevated temperature (heat shock or ramping to 45 degrees C) significantly reduced production and retention of fruits in all cotton lines used in this study. At the termination of heat treatment, cotton plants exposed to 45 degrees C had at least 50% fewer fruits than plants under optimum temperature in all three genotypes, while plants at 36 degrees C remained unaffected. Heat-stressed plants continued producing new squares (fruiting buds) after termination of heat stress but these squares did not turn into cotton bolls due to pollen infertility. In vitro inhibition of pollen germination by high temperatures supported this observation. Leaf photosynthesis (P-n) of heat-stressed plants (45 degrees C) measured at the end of heat treatments remained significantly inhibited, despite an increased leaf stomatal conductance (g(s)), suggesting that high temperature impairs P-n independently of stomatal behavior. Metabolic injury was supported by high relative cellular injury and low photosystem II yield of the heat-stressed plants, indicating that high temperature impaired photosynthetic electron transport. Both heat shock and ramping of heat significantly reduced ethylene release from cotton leaf tissues measured at the end of heat treatment but modulating ethylene production via AVG or ACC application had no significant effect on fruit production or retention in heat-stressed cotton plants. Instead, high temperature accelerated fruit abortion by impairing pollen development and/or restricting leaf photosynthesis.

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