Abstract

BackgroundPhosphate (Pi) deficiency severely affects crop growth and productivity, including wheat, therefore it is necessary to develop cultivars with enhanced Pi-deficiency tolerance. However, the underlying mechanism of Pi-deficiency tolerance in wheat is still elusive. Two contrasting wheat cultivars, low-Pi tolerant Kenong199 (KN199) and low-Pi sensitive Chinese Spring (CS) were used to reveal adaptations in response to Pi deficiency at the morphological, physiological, metabolic, and molecular levels.ResultsKN199 was more tolerant to Pi deficiency than CS with significantly increased root biomass and R/S ratio. Root traits, the total root length, total root surface area, and total root volume, were remarkably enhanced by Pi deficiency in KN199. The shoot total P and soluble Pi concentrations of KN199 were significantly higher than those of CS, but not in roots. In KN199, high Pi level in shoots is a higher priority than that in roots under Pi deficiency. It was probably due to differentially regulation in the miR399-mediated signaling network between the shoots of the two cultivars. The Pi deficiency-induced root architecture adaptation in KN199 was attributed to the regulation of the hormone-mediated signaling (ethylene, gibberellin, and jasmonates). The expression of genes associated with root development and Pi uptake was enhanced in KN199. Some primary metabolites (amino acids and organic acids) were significantly accumulated in roots of KN199 under Pi deficiency.ConclusionsThe low-Pi tolerant wheat cultivar KN199 possessed greater morphological and primary metabolic adaptations in roots than CS under Pi deficiency. The adaption and the underlying molecular mechanisms in wheat provide a better understanding of the Pi-deficiency tolerance and the strategies for improving Pi efficiency in wheat.

Highlights

  • Phosphate (Pi) deficiency severely affects crop growth and productivity, including wheat, it is necessary to develop cultivars with enhanced inorganic phosphate (Pi)-deficiency tolerance

  • KN199 was more tolerant to Pi deficiency than Chinese Spring (CS) with significantly increased root biomass and R/S ratio To elucidate the low-Pi tolerance mechanism, the effect of Pi deficiency on the two contrasting cultivars, CS and KN199, was investigated at the seedling stage growing under hydroponic condition

  • In summary, our results demonstrated a suite of Pi deficiency responses ranging from root morphology, physiology, gene expression, and metabolites using low-Pi sensitive cultivar CS and low-Pi tolerant cultivar KN199

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Summary

Introduction

Phosphate (Pi) deficiency severely affects crop growth and productivity, including wheat, it is necessary to develop cultivars with enhanced Pi-deficiency tolerance. Phosphorus (P) is an essential macronutrient required for plant growth and development It is one of the main constituents of nucleic acids, phospholipids, ATP and. To adapt to low-Pi environments, plants have evolved several complex and elaborate responsive and adaptive mechanisms to maintain Pi homeostasis, including root system architecture (RSA) modification, organic acid exudation, production and secretion of phosphatases, and association of the roots with soil microbes, and so on [4, 5]. Da Silva et al reported the Brazilian wheat cultivars with higher P uptake efficiency exhibited total root shallow, enhancing root proliferation in P-rich surface soil [14]

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