Abstract

BackgroundIntercropping and close planting are important cultivation methods that increase soybean yield in agricultural production. However, plant shading is a major abiotic stress factor that influences soybean growth and development. Although shade affects leaf morphological parameters and decreases leaf photosynthesis capacity, information on the responses of soybean leaf photosynthesis to shading at proteomic level is still lacking.ResultsCompared with leaves under normal light (CK) treatment, leaves under shading treatment exhibited decreased palisade and spongy tissue thicknesses but significantly increased cell gap. Although shade increased the number of the chloroplast, the thickness of the grana lamella and the photosynthetic pigments per unit mass, but the size of the chloroplast and starch grains and the rate of net photosynthesis decreased compared with those of under CK treatment. A total of 248 differentially expressed proteins, among which 138 were upregulated, and 110 were downregulated, in soybean leaves under shading and CK treatments were detected via isobaric tags for relative and absolute quantification labeling in the three biological repeats. Differentially expressed proteins were classified into 3 large and 20 small groups. Most proteins involved in porphyrin and chlorophyll metabolism, photosynthesis-antenna proteins and carbon fixation in photosynthetic organisms were upregulated. By contrast, proteins involved in photosynthesis were downregulated. The gene family members corresponding to differentially expressed proteins, including protochlorophyllide reductase (Glyma06g247100), geranylgeranyl hydrogenase (Ggh), LHCB1 (Lhcb1) and ferredoxin (N/A) involved in the porphyrin and chlorophyll metabolism, photosynthesis-antenna proteins and photosynthesis pathway were verified with real-time qPCR. The results showed that the expression patterns of the genes were consistent with the expression patterns of the corresponding proteins.ConclusionsThis study combined the variation of the soybean leaf structure and differentially expressed proteins of soybean leaves under shading. These results demonstrated that shade condition increased the light capture efficiency of photosystem II (PSII) in soybean leaves but decreased the capacity from PSII transmitted to photosystem II (PSI). This maybe the major reason that the photosynthetic capacity was decreased in shading.

Highlights

  • Intercropping and close planting are important cultivation methods that increase soybean yield in agricultural production

  • Compared with CK treatment, photosynthetic rate (Pn) value of leaves under shading treatment significantly decreased by 39.3%, but their Ci value significantly increased by 22.0%

  • The major photosynthetic pigments found in soybean leaves were chlorophyll a (Chl a), chlorophyll b (Chl b), and carotene (Car)

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Summary

Introduction

Intercropping and close planting are important cultivation methods that increase soybean yield in agricultural production. Merr.) is a legume species that is widely planted in the worldwide. Intercropping systems are beneficial for biodiversity conservation and increase crop yield in many countries [3,4,5]. Examples of intercropping patterns include wheat–maize, maize–soybean, sunflower– soybean, and sorghum–soybean. Among these examples, maize–soybean intercropping is a major planting pattern in the worldwide; it remarkably enhances soybean production while maintaining the maize yield [6, 7]. During the symbiotic period of maize–soybean intercropping system, tall maize plants directly change the light environment, especially the quality and intensity of light, of the soybean. Most previous studies on the photosynthetic response of crops to shading mainly used artificial shading or single light, which does not change the spectrum components

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