Applications of Xerophytophysiology and Signal Transduction in Plant Production—Flower Qualities in Eustoma grandiflorum Were Improved by Sub-Irrigation
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Material and Methods
2.1. Preparation of Plant Materials
2.2. Analysis of Leaf Photosynthesis
2.3. Measurement of Leaf Color
2.4. Dry Mass Production
2.5. Measurement of Concentration of Anthocyanins
2.6. Determination of Salicylic Acid Concentration
2.7. PCR Analysis for PAL Gene Expression
2.8. Data Collection for Pressure–Volume Curve Analysis
2.9. Modeling Equation Used in this Paper
- (1)
- (2)
- The incipient plasmolysis or zero-turgor point [9]
- (3)
- The re-compartmentation of the symplastic and apoplastic water
- (4)
- Analysis of osmotic adjustment
- (5)
- The analysis of leaf water retention ability [34]
- (6)
- Analysis of the diurnal opening and closing oscillations
- (7)
- Mathematical modeling for the flower opening oscillation curve
2.10. Statistical Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Sub-Irrigation Improved Leaf Photosynthetic Activities, Plant Growth, and Flower Quality
3.1.1. Photosynthetic Activities
3.1.2. Biomass Production
3.1.3. Leaf Color and Flower Quality
3.2. Increase in Salicylic Acid Concentration and Up-Regulation of PAL Gene
3.2.1. Concentration of Salicylic Acid
3.2.2. Up-Regulation of PAL Gene
3.3. Sub-Irrigation Induced Osmotic Adjustment and Improved Leaf Turgor Potential
3.3.1. Leaf Turgor Potential and Osmotic Adjustment
3.3.2. Cell Water Compartmenting
3.3.3. Osmotic Potential and Relative Water Content at Incipient Plasmolysis
3.4. Leaf Water Retention Ability
3.5. Flower Opening and Closing Oscillations
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Abbr. | Unit | Definition |
---|---|---|
Photosynthesis–light response curve analysis | ||
PC | μmol m−2 s−1 | The photosynthetic capacity. |
PN | μmol m−2 s−1 | The net photosynthetic rate. |
RD | μmol m−2 s−1 | Dark respiration rate. |
K | μmol−1 m2 s | Constant proportional to the initial slope and the curviness of the photosynthesis–light response curve. |
i | μmol m−2 s−1 | Photosynthetic photon flux. |
YQ | mol mol−1 | The maximum quantum yield, proportional to the initial slope of the photosynthesis–light response curve, calculated as YQ = KPC. |
Pressure–Volume curve analysis | ||
Ψ | MPa | Leaf water potential. |
ΨFT | MPa | Ψ at fully turgid status. |
π | MPa | Leaf osmotic potential. |
πs+a | MPa | The average osmotic potential (π) with hypothesis that symplastic solution was diluted by apoplast water. |
πFT | MPa | π at fully turgid status. |
πIP | MPa | π at zero turgor or incipient plasmolysis, calculated from the P-V curve at Ψ = 0.99π. |
ζFT | Relative leaf water content (ζ) at fully turgid status. | |
ζIP | ζ at the zero-turgor point. | |
ζap | The water fraction in apoplasm. | |
ζsym | The water fraction in symplasm. | |
α | Constant proportional to the slope of the initial part of the P-V curve. | |
β | Constant proportional to the slope of the second sloping phase of the P-V curve. | |
CFT | mol m−3 | Concentration of osmotically active substances. |
cΔCFT | The active increment of CFT compared with control. | |
Analysis of the transpiration declining curve in excised leaves | ||
ζsat | Relative leaf water content (ζ) at saturation status. | |
ζSC | ζ at the time when stomata are completely closed. | |
t | Time since the drying process started. | |
α′ | Constant proportional to slope of the initial steep-sloped part of the curve and to the rapid rate of water loss, mainly by stomatal transpiration. | |
β′ | Constant proportional to the slope of the second gently sloped part and to the rate of water loss by cuticular transpiration when stomata are closed. | |
τD | Time used to dry up the excised leaf to its relative water content of 10%. | |
Analysis of flower opening and closing oscillations | ||
ZT | h | Zone time; in the present study the zone time is Tokyo time. |
Y | The opening extent relative to the maximum opening of the flower. | |
YA | The initial amplitude of oscillations. | |
YR | The residual values of Y at the initial oscillation bottom. | |
YA96 | The amplitude of oscillations at ZT96. | |
T | h | The oscillation period. |
ω | The angular velocity in the sinusoidal function equation. | |
λ | The coefficient to adjust the change of ω. The value of ω would be larger and thus the oscillation period (T) smaller if λ was positive; if λ was negative, ω would become smaller and thus T larger as time progressed. | |
τ | h | The time needed to adjust Y to move into the oscillation process. |
α | The coefficient related to the expansion or decay of the oscillation amplitude (YA), which would be smaller and smaller if λ was negative and larger and larger if λ was positive. | |
β | The coefficient related to the dynamic change of YR, which would be larger and larger if λ was positive, showing an upward drifting pattern of oscillation rhythm. If λ was negative, the oscillation rhythm shows a downward drifting pattern. | |
f | h−1 | Oscillation frequency (f = ω/2π = 1/T). |
T | h | The period of oscillation (T = 2π/ω). T0 and T96 are T at the initial and at ZT96. |
Irrigation | PC | RD | YQ | Biomass (g pl−1) | R/T | Leaf Color | Antho | SA | PAL | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
(μmol m−2 s−1) | (mol mol−1) | Shoot | Root | Total | (%) | (SPAD) | (A530 g−1 FW) | (μg kg−1) | |||
Overhead | 18.6 | 2.7 | 0.0452 | 7.02 | 0.95 | 7.97 | 11.9 | 37.9 | 68.3 | 3.2 | 1.17 |
Sub | 20.7 | 3.0 | 0.0534 | 8.95 | 1.43 | 10.38 | 13.8 | 41.2 | 79.2 | 44.3 | 7.82 |
Statistic | * | * | ** | * | ** | ** | * | ** | ** | ** | ** |
Irrigation | ΨFT | πFT | PFT | πs+a | ΨMD | πMD | PMD | πIP | ζsym | ζapo | α | β | ζIP | CFT | ΔCFT |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Overhead | −0.27 | −0.88 | 0.61 | −0.57 | −0.65 | −0.99 | 0.34 | −1.11 | 0.26 | 0.74 | 47.6 | 0.98 | 0.842 | 360.8 | 0.0 |
Sub | −0.28 | −0.96 | 0.68 | −0.63 | −0.63 | −1.08 | 0.43 | −1.19 | 0.31 | 0.69 | 54.3 | 0.99 | 0.821 | 393.6 | 32.8 |
Statistic | ns | ** | ** | ** | ns | ** | ** | * | ** | ** | * | ns | * | ** | ** |
Irrigation | ζSC | α | β | τD (103 s) | WRA |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Overhead | 0.721 | 0.648 | 0.122 | 70.6 | 9.74 |
Sub | 0.702 | 0.699 | 0.101 | 84.1 | 11.33 |
Statistic | * | * | ** | ** | ** |
Plot | ω | YA | YA96 | YR | T0 | T96 | λ | τ | α | β |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Overhead | 0.252 | 0.426 | 0.253 | 0.03 | 24.92 | 24.30 | −0.00454 | 6.2 | −0.000284 | 0.0891 |
Sub | 0.255 | 0.438 | 0.326 | 0.03 | 24.63 | 24.12 | −0.00284 | 6.1 | −0.000235 | 0.0778 |
Statistic | * | * | * | ns | * | * | ** | ns | * | * |
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Xu, H.-L.; Bai, J.; Kawabata, S.; Chang, T. Applications of Xerophytophysiology and Signal Transduction in Plant Production—Flower Qualities in Eustoma grandiflorum Were Improved by Sub-Irrigation. Sustainability 2023, 15, 1578. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15021578
Xu H-L, Bai J, Kawabata S, Chang T. Applications of Xerophytophysiology and Signal Transduction in Plant Production—Flower Qualities in Eustoma grandiflorum Were Improved by Sub-Irrigation. Sustainability. 2023; 15(2):1578. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15021578
Chicago/Turabian StyleXu, Hui-Lian, Jianfang Bai, Saneyuki Kawabata, and Tingting Chang. 2023. "Applications of Xerophytophysiology and Signal Transduction in Plant Production—Flower Qualities in Eustoma grandiflorum Were Improved by Sub-Irrigation" Sustainability 15, no. 2: 1578. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15021578
APA StyleXu, H.-L., Bai, J., Kawabata, S., & Chang, T. (2023). Applications of Xerophytophysiology and Signal Transduction in Plant Production—Flower Qualities in Eustoma grandiflorum Were Improved by Sub-Irrigation. Sustainability, 15(2), 1578. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15021578