Root acclimations to soil flooding prime rice (Oryza sativa L.) for subsequent conditions of water deficit

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Root acclimations to soil flooding prime rice (Oryza sativa L.) for subsequent conditions of water deficit. / Peralta Ogorek, Lucas León; Song, Zhiwei; Pellegrini, Elisa; Liu, Fulai; Tomasella, Martina; Nardini, Andrea; Pedersen, Ole.

In: Plant and Soil, Vol. 494, 2024, p. 529-546.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Peralta Ogorek, LL, Song, Z, Pellegrini, E, Liu, F, Tomasella, M, Nardini, A & Pedersen, O 2024, 'Root acclimations to soil flooding prime rice (Oryza sativa L.) for subsequent conditions of water deficit', Plant and Soil, vol. 494, pp. 529-546. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11104-023-06299-7

APA

Peralta Ogorek, L. L., Song, Z., Pellegrini, E., Liu, F., Tomasella, M., Nardini, A., & Pedersen, O. (2024). Root acclimations to soil flooding prime rice (Oryza sativa L.) for subsequent conditions of water deficit. Plant and Soil, 494, 529-546. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11104-023-06299-7

Vancouver

Peralta Ogorek LL, Song Z, Pellegrini E, Liu F, Tomasella M, Nardini A et al. Root acclimations to soil flooding prime rice (Oryza sativa L.) for subsequent conditions of water deficit. Plant and Soil. 2024;494:529-546. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11104-023-06299-7

Author

Peralta Ogorek, Lucas León ; Song, Zhiwei ; Pellegrini, Elisa ; Liu, Fulai ; Tomasella, Martina ; Nardini, Andrea ; Pedersen, Ole. / Root acclimations to soil flooding prime rice (Oryza sativa L.) for subsequent conditions of water deficit. In: Plant and Soil. 2024 ; Vol. 494. pp. 529-546.

Bibtex

@article{ef177b9b9fe44b6aa578482d3538fd9a,
title = "Root acclimations to soil flooding prime rice (Oryza sativa L.) for subsequent conditions of water deficit",
abstract = "Background and aimsThe root barrier to radial O2 loss is a trait induced during soil flooding restricting oxygen loss from the roots to the anoxic soil. It can also restrict radial water loss, potentially providing tolerance towards drought during conditions of water deficit. Several root traits (aerenchyma and xylem vessels area) respond in a similar way to soil flooding and low soil water potentials. Therefore, we hypothesised that root acclimations to soil flooding prime plants to withstand conditions of water deficit.MethodsWe raised plants in hydroponics mimicking contrasting soil water conditions (aerated controls for well-watered soils; stagnant, deoxygenated solutions for flooded soils, and aerated solutions with different PEG6000 concentrations to mimic conditions of water deficit). We used O2 microsensors and gravimetric measurements to characterize the formation of a barrier to radial O2 loss during conditions of water deficit, and measured key anatomical root traits using light microscopy.ResultsSeveral root traits were induced in stagnant conditions as well as in conditions of water deficit, including the barrier to radial O2 loss. The tightness of the barrier to water loss was similar in both stagnant and PEG6000 treatments. Moreover, plants growing in stagnant conditions tolerated a following severe condition of water deficit, whereas those growing in mimicked well-watered conditions did not.ConclusionsWe demonstrated that plants growing in stagnant conditions can withstand following severe conditions of water deficit. We propose that key root traits, such as the barrier to radial O2 loss, which are induced in stagnant conditions as well as mild conditions of water deficit, prime the plants for a following severe condition of water deficit.",
author = "{Peralta Ogorek}, {Lucas Le{\'o}n} and Zhiwei Song and Elisa Pellegrini and Fulai Liu and Martina Tomasella and Andrea Nardini and Ole Pedersen",
year = "2024",
doi = "10.1007/s11104-023-06299-7",
language = "English",
volume = "494",
pages = "529--546",
journal = "Plant and Soil",
issn = "0032-079X",
publisher = "Springer",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Root acclimations to soil flooding prime rice (Oryza sativa L.) for subsequent conditions of water deficit

AU - Peralta Ogorek, Lucas León

AU - Song, Zhiwei

AU - Pellegrini, Elisa

AU - Liu, Fulai

AU - Tomasella, Martina

AU - Nardini, Andrea

AU - Pedersen, Ole

PY - 2024

Y1 - 2024

N2 - Background and aimsThe root barrier to radial O2 loss is a trait induced during soil flooding restricting oxygen loss from the roots to the anoxic soil. It can also restrict radial water loss, potentially providing tolerance towards drought during conditions of water deficit. Several root traits (aerenchyma and xylem vessels area) respond in a similar way to soil flooding and low soil water potentials. Therefore, we hypothesised that root acclimations to soil flooding prime plants to withstand conditions of water deficit.MethodsWe raised plants in hydroponics mimicking contrasting soil water conditions (aerated controls for well-watered soils; stagnant, deoxygenated solutions for flooded soils, and aerated solutions with different PEG6000 concentrations to mimic conditions of water deficit). We used O2 microsensors and gravimetric measurements to characterize the formation of a barrier to radial O2 loss during conditions of water deficit, and measured key anatomical root traits using light microscopy.ResultsSeveral root traits were induced in stagnant conditions as well as in conditions of water deficit, including the barrier to radial O2 loss. The tightness of the barrier to water loss was similar in both stagnant and PEG6000 treatments. Moreover, plants growing in stagnant conditions tolerated a following severe condition of water deficit, whereas those growing in mimicked well-watered conditions did not.ConclusionsWe demonstrated that plants growing in stagnant conditions can withstand following severe conditions of water deficit. We propose that key root traits, such as the barrier to radial O2 loss, which are induced in stagnant conditions as well as mild conditions of water deficit, prime the plants for a following severe condition of water deficit.

AB - Background and aimsThe root barrier to radial O2 loss is a trait induced during soil flooding restricting oxygen loss from the roots to the anoxic soil. It can also restrict radial water loss, potentially providing tolerance towards drought during conditions of water deficit. Several root traits (aerenchyma and xylem vessels area) respond in a similar way to soil flooding and low soil water potentials. Therefore, we hypothesised that root acclimations to soil flooding prime plants to withstand conditions of water deficit.MethodsWe raised plants in hydroponics mimicking contrasting soil water conditions (aerated controls for well-watered soils; stagnant, deoxygenated solutions for flooded soils, and aerated solutions with different PEG6000 concentrations to mimic conditions of water deficit). We used O2 microsensors and gravimetric measurements to characterize the formation of a barrier to radial O2 loss during conditions of water deficit, and measured key anatomical root traits using light microscopy.ResultsSeveral root traits were induced in stagnant conditions as well as in conditions of water deficit, including the barrier to radial O2 loss. The tightness of the barrier to water loss was similar in both stagnant and PEG6000 treatments. Moreover, plants growing in stagnant conditions tolerated a following severe condition of water deficit, whereas those growing in mimicked well-watered conditions did not.ConclusionsWe demonstrated that plants growing in stagnant conditions can withstand following severe conditions of water deficit. We propose that key root traits, such as the barrier to radial O2 loss, which are induced in stagnant conditions as well as mild conditions of water deficit, prime the plants for a following severe condition of water deficit.

U2 - 10.1007/s11104-023-06299-7

DO - 10.1007/s11104-023-06299-7

M3 - Journal article

VL - 494

SP - 529

EP - 546

JO - Plant and Soil

JF - Plant and Soil

SN - 0032-079X

ER -

ID: 369359477