Abstract

ABSTRACTPrevious studies indicate that methylated cyclitols are potentially important osmolytes in plants. In a search for genetic diversity for pinitol (D‐3‐O‐methyl‐chiro‐inositol) accumulation in soybean (Glycine max (L.) Merr.), two‐ to three‐fold differences in pinitol accumulation in leaf blades were found among Chinese plant introductions. Furthermore, it was found that genotypes that accumulated high concentrations of pinitol, when grown under well‐watered conditions, had been selected for performance in regions of China having low rainfall. Among the carbohydrates analysed, pinitol accumulation was uniquely associated with adaptation to dry areas of China. A detailed study of pinitol accumulation in the soybean plant showed two‐ to three‐fold gradients in pinitol concentration from the bottom to the top of the plant. The gradient shifted during plant development, with consistently higher concentrations of pinitol in the uppermost leaves. Pinitol accumulation was not correlated with activity of the key biosynthetic enzyme, inositol methyl transferase. This result and other lines of evidence indicated that shifting patterns of pinitol accumulation were due to translocation of the cyclitol from lower to upper nodes. Pinitol, proline, and sugars accumulated in leaf blades on soybean plants subjected to drought, but the molar concentration of pinitol in stressed plants was greater than the concentrations of proline or sugars. Although the mechanism by which pinitol participates in drought tolerance is not fully known, our results provide additional correlative evidence linking pinitol and drought tolerance in soybean.

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