Abstract

BackgroundDrought is a major consequence of global heating that has negative impacts on agriculture. Potato is a drought-sensitive crop; tuber growth and dry matter content may both be impacted. Moreover, water deficit can induce physiological disorders such as glassy tubers and internal rust spots. The response of potato plants to drought is complex and can be affected by cultivar type, climatic and soil conditions, and the point at which water stress occurs during growth. The characterization of adaptive responses in plants presents a major phenotyping challenge. There is therefore a demand for the development of non-invasive analytical techniques to improve phenotyping.ResultsThis project aimed to take advantage of innovative approaches in MRI, phenotyping and molecular biology to evaluate the effects of water stress on potato plants during growth. Plants were cultivated in pots under different water conditions. A control group of plants were cultivated under optimal water uptake conditions. Other groups were cultivated under mild and severe water deficiency conditions (40 and 20% of field capacity, respectively) applied at different tuber growth phases (initiation, filling). Water stress was evaluated by monitoring soil water potential. Two fully-equipped imaging cabinets were set up to characterize plant morphology using high definition color cameras (top and side views) and to measure plant stress using RGB cameras. The response of potato plants to water stress depended on the intensity and duration of the stress. Three-dimensional morphological images of the underground organs of potato plants in pots were recorded using a 1.5 T MRI scanner. A significant difference in growth kinetics was observed at the early growth stages between the control and stressed plants. Quantitative PCR analysis was carried out at molecular level on the expression patterns of selected drought-responsive genes. Variations in stress levels were seen to modulate ABA and drought-responsive ABA-dependent and ABA-independent genes.ConclusionsThis methodology, when applied to the phenotyping of potato under water deficit conditions, provides a quantitative analysis of leaves and tubers properties at microstructural and molecular levels. The approaches thus developed could therefore be effective in the multi-scale characterization of plant response to water stress, from organ development to gene expression.

Highlights

  • Potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) is cultivated on every continent other than Antarctica

  • High‐throughput phenotyping parameters Three water regimes were tested first, (i) an optimal water supply (Control) condition corresponding to soil watering at 70% of field capacity, (ii) a Mild Water Deficit (MWD) condition corresponding to 40% of field capacity and (iii) a Severe Water Deficit (SWD) corresponding to 20% of field capacity

  • It was observed that all architectural parameters respond to the water gradient especially the biomass development represented by hull areas from the 25th day after shoot emergence (25 days after shoot emergence (DASE)) (Fig. 1a–d)

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Summary

Introduction

Potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) is cultivated on every continent other than Antarctica. Compared to other field crop species, potato is considered to be relatively sensitive to water stress [1,2,3]. A proportion of the expression is linked to tuber formation and growth which occurs underground. This explains why, the consequences of water stress on potato yield are well known, the effects of dehydration at key stages of sensitivity on yield are poorly understood. The development of effective phenotyping tools, from microscopic to macroscopic level, especially for underground tubers, is a key bottleneck in deciphering and acquiring a better understanding of the effects of water stress on potato growth and its impact on yield. There is a demand for the development of non-invasive analytical techniques to improve phenotyping

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