4.7 Article

Wheat respiratory O2 consumption falls with night warming alongside greater respiratory CO2 loss and reduced biomass

期刊

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BOTANY
卷 73, 期 3, 页码 915-926

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/jxb/erab454

关键词

Alternative oxidase; high temperature; night warming; respiration; thermal acclimation; wheat

资金

  1. Grains Research Development Corporation (GRDC) [US00080, UOS1904-003RTX]
  2. Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence in Plant Energy Biology [CE140100008]
  3. Australian Government Research Training Program
  4. GRDC Fellowship [UOS1904-003RTX]
  5. Research England's 'Expanding Excellence in England' (E3)
  6. US Department of Energy [DE-SC0012704]
  7. US National Science Foundation, Biological Integration Institutes grant [NSF-DBI-2021898]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The study showed that warm nights can lead to decreased plant biomass, reduced oxygen consumption in respiration, increased carbon dioxide release, and enhanced capacity of the alternative oxidase pathway.
Warming nights are correlated with declining wheat growth and yield. As a key determinant of plant biomass, respiration consumes O-2 as it produces ATP and releases CO2 and is typically reduced under warming to maintain metabolic efficiency. We compared the response of respiratory O-2 and CO2 flux to multiple night and day warming treatments in wheat leaves and roots, using one commercial (Mace) and one breeding cultivar grown in controlled environments. We also examined the effect of night warming and a day heatwave on the capacity of the ATP-uncoupled alternative oxidase (AOX) pathway. Under warm nights, plant biomass fell, respiratory CO2 release measured at a common temperature was unchanged (indicating higher rates of CO2 release at prevailing growth temperature), respiratory O-2 consumption at a common temperature declined, and AOX pathway capacity increased. The uncoupling of CO2 and O-2 exchange and enhanced AOX pathway capacity suggest a reduction in plant energy demand under warm nights (lower O-2 consumption), alongside higher rates of CO2 release under prevailing growth temperature (due to a lack of down-regulation of respiratory CO2 release). Less efficient ATP synthesis, teamed with sustained CO2 flux, could thus be driving observed biomass declines under warm nights. Elevated night growth temperature drove acclimation of wheat respiratory O(2)consumption, but not respiratory CO(2)release. Night warming also reduced biomass and enhanced the capacity of the alternative oxidase pathway.

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