Abstract

BackgroundIt is known that hexaploid common wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) has stronger adaptability to many stressful environments than its tetraploid wheat progenitor. However, the physiological basis and evolutionary course to acquire these enhanced adaptabilities by common wheat remain understudied. Here, we aimed to investigate whether and by what means tolerance to low-nitrogen manifested by common wheat may emerge immediately following allohexaploidization.ResultsWe compared traits related to nitrogen (N) metabolism in a synthetic allohexaploid wheat (neo-6×, BBAADD) mimicking natural common wheat, together with its tetraploid (BBAA, 4×) and diploid (DD, 2×) parents. We found that, under low nitrogen condition, neo-6× maintained largely normal photosynthesis, higher shoot N accumulation, and better N assimilation than its 4× and 2× parents. We showed that multiple mechanisms underlie the enhanced tolerance to N-deficiency in neo-6×. At morphological level, neo-6× has higher root/shoot ratio of biomass than its parents, which might be an adaptive growth strategy as more roots feed less shoots with N, thereby enabling higher N accumulation in the shoots. At electrophysiological level, H+ efflux in neo-6× is higher than in its 4× parent. A stronger H+ efflux may enable a higher N uptake capacity of neo-6×. At gene expression level, neo-6× displayed markedly higher expression levels of critical genes involved in N uptake than both of its 4× and 2× parents.ConclusionsThis study documents that allohexaploid wheat can attain immediate higher tolerance to N-deficiency compared with both of its 4× and 2× parents, and which was accomplished via multiple mechanisms.

Highlights

  • It is known that hexaploid common wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) has stronger adaptability to many stressful environments than its tetraploid wheat progenitor

  • We measured three photosynthetic parameters, photosynthetic rate (PN), gS, and E under both N conditions, and found that the four wheat lines were similar in all three parameters under normal N condition (Fig. 1); under low N condition, the three parameters were much higher in neo-6× than in its parental genotypes and, surprisingly, even higher than nat-6×

  • Our results of this study have shown that traits related to N metabolism in polyploid wheat is associated with their genome compositions as far as a synthetic hexaploid wheat is concerned

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Summary

Introduction

It is known that hexaploid common wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) has stronger adaptability to many stressful environments than its tetraploid wheat progenitor. Polyploidy, or whole genome duplication (WGD), is a pervasive driving force in the evolution of higher plants [1,2,3,4]. Polyploidy has contributed significantly to the domestication of important crops such as wheat, canola, potato, sugarcane and cotton. Hexaploid common wheat (Triticum aestivum L., genome BBAADD) is an very young allohexaploid species The formation and success of hexaploid wheat provides a suitable system to explore whether polyploidy-specific properties have evolved in the course of polyploid genome evolution or being conferred immediately following polyploidization because their progenitor species, Yang et al BMC Plant Biology (2018) 18:113 tetraploid wheat (T. turgidum, genomes BBAA) and the D-genome goat-grass (Aegilops tauschii) are still extant

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