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Rate of photosynthetic acclimation to fluctuating light varies widely among genotypes of wheat

Authors :
Richard A. Richards
Andrew Merchant
Richard Trethowan
Thomas N. Buckley
William T. Salter
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2018.

Abstract

HighlightSignificant variation exists in the acclimation time of photosynthesis following dark-to-light transitions across wheat genotypes, under field and controlled conditions. Slow acclimation reduced daily carbon assimilation by up to 16%.AbstractCrop photosynthesis and yield are limited by slow photosynthetic induction in sunflecks. We quantified variation in induction kinetics across diverse genotypes of wheat for the first time. In a preliminary study using penultimate leaves of 58 genotypes grown in the field, we measured induction kinetics for maximum assimilation rate (Amax) after a shift from full darkness to saturating light (1700 μmol m−2 s−1) with 1-4 replicates per genotype. We then grew 10 of these genotypes with contrasting responses in a controlled environment and quantified induction kinetics of carboxylation capacity (Vcmax) from dynamic A vs ci curves after a shift from low to high light (50 to 1500 μmol m−2 s−1), with 5 replicates per genotype. Within-genotype median time for 95% induction (t95) varied from 8.4 to 23.7 min across genotypes for Amax in field-grown penultimate leaves, and from 6.7 to 10.4 min for Vcmaxin chamber-grown flag leaves. Our simulations suggested that non-instantaneous acclimation reduces daily net carbon gain by up to 16%, and that breeding to speed up Vcmax induction in the slowest genotype to match that in the fastest genotype could increase daily net carbon gain by more than 4%, particularly for leaves that experience predominantly short-duration sunflecks.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7f6da0c0ebd45701d6dc373fa46dae61
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/435834