
An attempt to interpret a biochemical mechanism of C4 photosynthetic thermo-tolerance under sudden heat shock on detached leaf in elevated CO2 grown maize
Author(s) -
Mingnan Qu,
James A. Bunce,
Richard C. Sicher,
Bo Gao,
Genyun Chen
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0187437
Subject(s) - photosynthesis , horticulture , thermostability , heat shock protein , heat shock , stomatal conductance , acclimatization , biology , botany , canopy , chemistry , enzyme , biochemistry , gene
Detached leaves at top canopy structures always experience higher solar irradiance and leaf temperature under natural conditions. The ability of tolerance to high temperature represents thermotolerance potential of whole-plants, but was less of concern. In this study, we used a heat-tolerant (B76) and a heat-susceptible (B106) maize inbred line to assess the possible mitigation of sudden heat shock (SHS) effects on photosynthesis (P N ) and C 4 assimilation pathway by elevated [CO 2 ]. Two maize lines were grown in field-based open top chambers (OTCs) at ambient and elevated (+180 ppm) [CO 2 ] . Top-expanded leaves for 30 days after emergence were suddenly exposed to a 45°C SHS for 2 hours in midday during measurements. Analysis on thermostability of cellular membrane showed there was 20% greater electrolyte leakage in response to the SHS in B106 compared to B76, in agreement with prior studies. Elevated [CO 2 ] protected P N from SHS in B76 but not B106. The responses of P N to SHS among the two lines and grown CO 2 treatments were closely correlated with measured decreases of NADP-ME enzyme activity and also to its reduced transcript abundance. The SHS treatments induced starch depletion, the accumulation of hexoses and also disrupted the TCA cycle as well as the C 4 assimilation pathway in the both lines. Elevated [CO 2 ] reversed SHS effects on citrate and related TCA cycle metabolites in B106 but the effects of elevated [CO 2 ] were small in B76. These findings suggested that heat stress tolerance is a complex trait, and it is difficult to identify biochemical, physiological or molecular markers that accurately and consistently predict heat stress tolerance.