Sink Strength Maintenance Underlies Drought Tolerance in Common Bean
Autor: | Elizabeth Van Volkenburgh, Amber Hageman |
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Rok vydání: | 2021 |
Předmět: |
0106 biological sciences
0301 basic medicine Resource (biology) Yield (finance) Drought tolerance Review Plant Science Biology Photosynthesis 01 natural sciences 03 medical and health sciences chemistry.chemical_compound allocation partitioning lcsh:Botany Abscisic acid Ecology Evolution Behavior and Systematics Biomass (ecology) Ecology fungi food and beverages yield Indeterminate growth SUT pod harvest index lcsh:QK1-989 030104 developmental biology Agronomy chemistry proton pump harvest index Sink (computing) 010606 plant biology & botany |
Zdroj: | Plants, Vol 10, Iss 489, p 489 (2021) Plants |
ISSN: | 2223-7747 |
DOI: | 10.3390/plants10030489 |
Popis: | Drought is a major limiter of yield in common bean, decreasing food security for those who rely on it as an important source of protein. While drought can have large impacts on yield by reducing photosynthesis and therefore resources availability, source strength is not a reliable indicator of yield. One reason resource availability does not always translate to yield in common bean is because of a trait inherited from wild ancestors. Wild common bean halts growth and seed filling under drought and awaits better conditions to resume its developmental program. This trait has been carried into domesticated lines, where it can result in strong losses of yield in plants already producing pods and seeds, especially since many domesticated lines were bred to have a determinate growth habit. This limits the plants ability to produce another flush of flowers, even if the first set is aborted. However, some bred lines are able to maintain higher yields under drought through maintaining growth and seed filling rates even under water limitations, unlike their wild predecessors. We believe that maintenance of sink strength underlies this ability, since plants which fill seeds under drought maintain growth of sinks generally, and growth of sinks correlates strongly with yield. Sink strength is determined by a tissue’s ability to acquire resources, which in turn relies on resource uptake and metabolism in that tissue. Lines which achieve higher yields maintain higher resource uptake rates into seeds and overall higher partitioning efficiencies of total biomass to yield. Drought limits metabolism and resource uptake through the signaling molecule abscisic acid (ABA) and its downstream affects. Perhaps lines which maintain higher sink strength and therefore higher yields do so through decreased sensitivity to or production of ABA. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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