Physiological mechanisms preventing plant wilting under heat stress: a case study on a wheat (Triticum durum Desf.) bound water-mutant
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2023
abstract:
Wilting is the main symptom of plants suffering the dehydration stresses, but the mechanisms governing this
phenomenon are yet to be completely understood. In this work, a holistic analysis of physiological traits
potentially involved in leaf wilting was performed, comparing a wheat wild type (WT), Trinakria and its water-
mutant (WM) with a "high affinity for bound water (BW)". In addition to the tendency to wilt, significant dif-
ferences between genotypes were observed for leaf temperature achieved under heat stress, leaf turgor loss with
decreasing water potential, cuticular transpiration, and Q10 of leaf water uptake velocity. We hypothesize that
mutant plants prevent the increase in leaf temperature thanks to the rapid and low energetic cost of water
diffusion from the vessels to the outside, driven by the BW. Under strong thermal-induced dehydration stress, BW
delays leaf wilting through its positive effects on cell wall elasticity and passive osmoregulation
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Wilting Heat stress Water status and fluxes Thermo-imaging Wheat
List of contributors:
Goglia, Lorenzo; Sorrentino, Giuseppe
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