Grain carbon isotope composition is a marker for allocation and harvest index in wheat
LAMOTHE‐SIBOLD, Marlène
Institut des Sciences des Plantes de Paris-Saclay [IPS2 (UMR_9213 / UMR_1403)]
Institut des Sciences des Plantes de Paris-Saclay [IPS2 (UMR_9213 / UMR_1403)]
LIMAMI, Anis
Institut de Recherche en Horticulture et Semences [IRHS]
IRHS - Équipe SMS (Source and sink Metabolism and Stress responses) [IRHS-SMS]
Institut de Recherche en Horticulture et Semences [IRHS]
IRHS - Équipe SMS (Source and sink Metabolism and Stress responses) [IRHS-SMS]
TCHERKEZ, Guillaume
Institut de Recherche en Horticulture et Semences [IRHS]
IRHS - Équipe SMS (Source and sink Metabolism and Stress responses) [IRHS-SMS]
< Réduire
Institut de Recherche en Horticulture et Semences [IRHS]
IRHS - Équipe SMS (Source and sink Metabolism and Stress responses) [IRHS-SMS]
Langue
en
Article de revue
Ce document a été publié dans
Plant, Cell and Environment. 2022-05p. pce.14339
Wiley
Résumé en anglais
The natural C-13 abundance (delta C-13) in plant leaves has been used for decades with great success in agronomy to monitor water-use efficiency and select modern cultivars adapted to dry conditions. However, in wheat, it ...Lire la suite >
The natural C-13 abundance (delta C-13) in plant leaves has been used for decades with great success in agronomy to monitor water-use efficiency and select modern cultivars adapted to dry conditions. However, in wheat, it is also important to find genotypes with high carbon allocation to spikes and grains, and thus with a high harvest index (HI) and/or low carbon losses via respiration. Finding isotope-based markers of carbon partitioning to grains would be extremely useful since isotope analyses are inexpensive and can be performed routinely at high throughput. Here, we took the advantage of a set of field trials made of more than 600 plots with several wheat cultivars and measured agronomic parameters as well as delta C-13 values in leaves and grains. We find a linear relationship between the apparent isotope discrimination between leaves and grain (denoted as Delta delta(corr)), and the respiration use efficiency-to-HI ratio. It means that overall, efficient carbon allocation to grains is associated with a small isotopic difference between leaves and grains. This effect is explained by postphotosynthetic isotope fractionations, and we show that this can be modelled by equations describing the carbon isotope composition in grains along the wheat growth cycle. Our results show that C-13 natural abundance in grains could be useful to find genotypes with better carbon allocation properties and assist current wheat breeding technologies.< Réduire
Mots clés en anglais
carbon 13
partitioning
post-photosynthetic fractionation
respiration use efficiency.
Origine
Importé de halUnités de recherche