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1.
Plant Physiol ; 183(2): 602-619, 2020 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32152213

RESUMEN

Crop improvement is crucial to ensuring global food security under climate change, and hence there is a pressing need for phenotypic observations that are both high throughput and improve mechanistic understanding of plant responses to environmental cues and limitations. In this study, chlorophyll a fluorescence light response curves and gas-exchange observations are combined to test the photosynthetic response to moderate drought in four genotypes of Brassica rapa The quantum yield of PSII (ϕ PSII ) is here analyzed as an exponential decline under changing light intensity and soil moisture. Both the maximum ϕ PSII and the rate of ϕ PSII decline across a large range of light intensities (0-1,000 µmol photons m-2 s-1; ß PSII ) are negatively affected by drought. We introduce an alternative photosynthesis model (ß PSII model) incorporating parameters from rapid fluorescence response curves. Specifically, the model uses ß PSII as an input for estimating the photosynthetic electron transport rate, which agrees well with two existing photosynthesis models (Farquhar-von Caemmerer-Berry and Yin). The ß PSII model represents a major improvement in photosynthesis modeling through the integration of high-throughput fluorescence phenotyping data, resulting in gained parameters of high mechanistic value.


Asunto(s)
Brassica/metabolismo , Brassica/fisiología , Clorofila A/metabolismo , Fluorescencia , Sequías , Genotipo , Fotosíntesis/fisiología , Complejo de Proteína del Fotosistema II/metabolismo
2.
New Phytol ; 225(2): 679-692, 2020 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31276231

RESUMEN

Trees may survive prolonged droughts by shifting water uptake to reliable water sources, but it is unknown if the dominant mechanism involves activating existing roots or growing new roots during drought, or some combination of the two. To gain mechanistic insights on this unknown, a dynamic root-hydraulic modeling framework was developed that set up a feedback between hydraulic controls over carbon allocation and the role of root growth on soil-plant hydraulics. The new model was tested using a 5 yr drought/heat field experiment on an established piñon-juniper stand with root access to bedrock groundwater. Owing to the high carbon cost per unit root area, modeled trees initialized without adequate bedrock groundwater access experienced potentially lethal declines in water potential, while all of the experimental trees maintained nonlethal water potentials. Simulated trees were unable to grow roots rapidly enough to mediate the hydraulic stress, particularly during warm droughts. Alternatively, modeled trees initiated with root access to bedrock groundwater matched the hydraulics of the experimental trees by increasing their water uptake from bedrock groundwater when soil layers dried out. Therefore, the modeling framework identified a critical mechanism for drought response that required trees to shift water uptake among existing roots rather than growing new roots.


Asunto(s)
Carbono/metabolismo , Sequías , Modelos Biológicos , Raíces de Plantas/fisiología , Tracheophyta/fisiología , Agua/fisiología , Simulación por Computador , Agua Subterránea , Juniperus/fisiología , Pinus/fisiología , Raíces de Plantas/crecimiento & desarrollo , Transpiración de Plantas/fisiología , Factores de Tiempo
3.
J Exp Bot ; 70(9): 2561-2574, 2019 04 29.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30825375

RESUMEN

Dynamic process-based plant models capture complex physiological response across time, carrying the potential to extend simulations out to novel environments and lend mechanistic insight to observed phenotypes. Despite the translational opportunities for varietal crop improvement that could be unlocked by linking natural genetic variation to first principles-based modeling, these models are challenging to apply to large populations of related individuals. Here we use a combination of model development, experimental evaluation, and genomic prediction in Brassica rapa L. to set the stage for future large-scale process-based modeling of intraspecific variation. We develop a new canopy growth submodel for B. rapa within the process-based model Terrestrial Regional Ecosystem Exchange Simulator (TREES), test input parameters for feasibility of direct estimation with observed phenotypes across cultivated morphotypes and indirect estimation using genomic prediction on a recombinant inbred line population, and explore model performance on an in silico population under non-stressed and mild water-stressed conditions. We find evidence that the updated whole-plant model has the capacity to distill genotype by environment interaction (G×E) into tractable components. The framework presented offers a means to link genetic variation with environment-modulated plant response and serves as a stepping stone towards large-scale prediction of unphenotyped, genetically related individuals under untested environmental scenarios.


Asunto(s)
Genómica/métodos , Plantas/genética , Ecosistema , Genotipo , Modelos Genéticos , Estrés Fisiológico/genética , Estrés Fisiológico/fisiología
4.
Front Plant Sci ; 9: 448, 2018.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29719545

RESUMEN

Agronomists have used statistical crop models to predict yield on a genotype-by-genotype basis. Mechanistic models, based on fundamental physiological processes common across plant taxa, will ultimately enable yield prediction applicable to diverse genotypes and crops. Here, genotypic information is combined with multiple mechanistically based models to characterize photosynthetic trait differentiation among genotypes of Brassica rapa. Infrared leaf gas exchange and chlorophyll fluorescence observations are analyzed using Bayesian methods. Three advantages of Bayesian approaches are employed: a hierarchical model structure, the testing of parameter estimates with posterior predictive checks and a multimodel complexity analysis. In all, eight models of photosynthesis are compared for fit to data and penalized for complexity using deviance information criteria (DIC) at the genotype scale. The multimodel evaluation improves the credibility of trait estimates using posterior distributions. Traits with important implications for yield in crops, including maximum rate of carboxylation (Vcmax ) and maximum rate of electron transport (Jmax ) show genotypic differentiation. B. rapa shows phenotypic diversity in causal traits with the potential for genetic enhancement of photosynthesis. This multimodel screening represents a statistically rigorous method for characterizing genotypic differences in traits with clear biophysical consequences to growth and productivity within large crop breeding populations with application across plant processes.

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