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Noninvasive imaging of hollow structures and gas movement revealed the gas partial‐pressure‐gradient‐driven long‐distance gas movement in the aerenchyma along the leaf blade to submerged organs in rice

Authors :
Keisuke Kurita
Yuta Miyoshi
Mitsutaka Yamaguchi
Yuto Nagao
Motoyuki Ashikari
Naoki Kawachi
Nobuo Suzui
Yong-Gen Yin
Yoshinao Mori
Keisuke Nagai
Source :
New Phytologist. 232:1974-1984
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Wiley, 2021.

Abstract

Rice (Oryza sativa) plants have porous or hollow organs consisting of aerenchyma, which is presumed to function as a low-resistance diffusion pathway for air to travel from the foliage above the water to submerged organs. However, gas movement in rice plants has yet to be visualized in real time. In this study involving partially submerged rice plants, the leaves emerging from the water were fed nitrogen-13-labeled nitrogen ([13 N]N2 ) tracer gas, and the gas movement downward along the leaf blade, leaf sheath, and internode over time was monitored. The [13 N]N2 gas arrived at the bottom of the plant within 10 min, which was 20 min earlier than carbon-11 photoassimilates. The [13 N]N2 gas movement was presumably mediated by diffusion along the aerenchyma network from the leaf blade to the root via nodes functioning as junctions, which were detected by X-ray computed tomography. These findings imply the diffusion of gas along the aerenchyma, which does not consume energy, has enabled plants to adapt to aquatic environments. Additionally, there were no major differences in [13 N]N2 gas movement between paddy rice and deepwater rice plants, indicative of a common aeration mechanism in the two varieties, despite the difference in their response to flooding.

Details

ISSN :
14698137 and 0028646X
Volume :
232
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
New Phytologist
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....05a7ca256835fb7d81fc1ccf97bf433f
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/nph.17726