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Acclimation to high CO2 in maize is related to water status and dependent on leaf rank

Authors :
Getu Beyene
P. J. Verrier
Christine H. Foyer
Till K. Pellny
Pavel I. Kerchev
Marta S. Lopes
Graham Noctor
Kaveh Emami
Josephine Muchwesi Mukubi
Achim Treumann
Caroline Lelarge-Trouverie
Anneke Prins
Karl J. Kunert
Source :
Plant, Cell & Environment. 34:314-331
Publication Year :
2010
Publisher :
Wiley, 2010.

Abstract

The responses of C(3) plants to rising atmospheric CO(2) levels are considered to be largely dependent on effects exerted through altered photosynthesis. In contrast, the nature of the responses of C(4) plants to high CO(2) remains controversial because of the absence of CO(2) -dependent effects on photosynthesis. In this study, the effects of atmospheric CO(2) availability on the transcriptome, proteome and metabolome profiles of two ranks of source leaves in maize (Zea mays L.) were studied in plants grown under ambient CO(2) conditions (350 +/- 20 µL L(-1) CO(2) ) or with CO(2) enrichment (700 +/- 20 µL L(-1) CO(2) ). Growth at high CO(2) had no effect on photosynthesis, photorespiration, leaf C/N ratios or anthocyanin contents. However, leaf transpiration rates, carbohydrate metabolism and protein carbonyl accumulation were altered at high CO(2) in a leaf-rank specific manner. Although no significant CO(2) -dependent changes in the leaf transcriptome were observed, qPCR analysis revealed that the abundance of transcripts encoding a Bowman-Birk protease inhibitor and a serpin were changed by the growth CO(2) level in a leaf rank specific manner. Moreover, CO(2) -dependent changes in the leaf proteome were most evident in the oldest source leaves. Small changes in water status may be responsible for the observed responses to high CO(2,) particularly in the older leaf ranks.

Details

ISSN :
01407791
Volume :
34
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Plant, Cell & Environment
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........c3e42da97b75bd52219092604401120c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-3040.2010.02245.x