Popis: |
Drought stress negatively impacts the health of long-lived trees. Understanding the genetic mechanisms that underpin response to drought stress is requisite for selecting or enhancing climate change resilience. We aimed to determine how hybrid poplars respond to prolonged and uniform exposure to drought; how responses to moderate and more severe growth-limiting drought stresses differed; and, how drought responses change throughout the day. We established hybrid poplar trees (Populus x ‘Okanese’) from unrooted stem cutting with abundant soil moisture for six weeks. We then withheld water to establish well-watered, moderate, and severe growth-limiting drought conditions. These conditions were maintained for three weeks during which growth was monitored. We then measured photosynthetic rates and transcriptomes of leaves that had developed during the drought treatments at two times of day. The moderate and severe drought treatments elicited distinct changes in growth and development, photosynthetic rates, and global transcriptome profiles. Notably, the time of day of sampling produced the strongest signal in the transcriptome data. The moderate drought treatment elicited global transcriptome changes that were intermediate to the severe and well-watered treatments in the early evening, but did not elicit a strong drought response in the morning, emphasizing the complex nature of drought regulation in long-lived trees.HighlightPoplar drought transcriptome is defined by the time of day of sampling and by the extent of water deficit. |