Albacete Alfonso, Martínez-Andújar Cristina, Martínez-Pérez Ascensión, Thompson Andrew J, Dodd Ian C, Pérez-Alfocea Francisco
Departamento de Nutrición Vegetal, CEBAS-CSIC, Campus Universitario de Espinardo, 25, E-30100 Murcia, Spain.
School of Energy, Environment and Agrifood, Cranfield University, Bedfordshire MK43 0AL, UK.
J Exp Bot. 2015 Apr;66(8):2211-26. doi: 10.1093/jxb/erv027. Epub 2015 Mar 9.
While much recent science has focused on understanding and exploiting root traits as new opportunities for crop improvement, the use of rootstocks has enhanced productivity of woody perennial crops for centuries. Grafting of vegetable crops has developed very quickly in the last 50 years, mainly to induce shoot vigour and to overcome soil-borne diseases in solanaceous and cucurbitaceous crops. In most cases, such progress has largely been due to empirical interactions between farmers, gardeners, and botanists, with limited insights into the underlying physiological mechanisms. Only during the last 20 years has science realized the potential of this old activity and studied the physiological and molecular mechanisms involved in rootstock×scion interactions, thereby not only explaining old phenomena but also developing new tools for crop improvement. Rootstocks can contribute to food security by: (i) increasing the yield potential of elite varieties; (ii) closing the yield gap under suboptimal growing conditions; (iii) decreasing the amount of chemical (pesticides and fertilizers) contaminants in the soil; (iv) increasing the efficiency of use of natural (water and soil) resources; (v) generating new useful genotypic variability (via epigenetics); and (vi) creating new products with improved quality. The potential of grafting is as broad as the genetic variability able to cross a potential incompatibility barrier between the rootstock and the scion. Therefore, understanding the mechanisms underlying the phenotypic variability resulting from rootstock×scion×environment interactions will certainly contribute to developing and exploiting rootstocks for food security.
尽管最近许多科学研究都聚焦于理解和利用根系性状作为作物改良的新机遇,但几个世纪以来,砧木的使用提高了多年生木本作物的生产力。在过去50年里,蔬菜作物的嫁接发展迅速,主要是为了促进地上部生长活力并克服茄科和葫芦科作物的土传病害。在大多数情况下,这种进展很大程度上归功于农民、园艺师和植物学家之间的经验性相互作用,而对潜在生理机制的了解有限。仅在过去20年里,科学界才认识到这项古老活动的潜力,并研究了砧木×接穗相互作用所涉及的生理和分子机制,这不仅解释了过去的现象,还开发了用于作物改良的新工具。砧木可通过以下方式促进粮食安全:(i)提高优良品种的产量潜力;(ii)缩小次优生长条件下的产量差距;(iii)减少土壤中化学(农药和化肥)污染物的含量;(iv)提高自然(水和土壤)资源的利用效率;(v)产生新的有用基因型变异(通过表观遗传学);以及(vi)创造品质改良的新产品。嫁接的潜力与能够跨越砧木和接穗之间潜在不亲和障碍的遗传变异性一样广泛。因此,理解砧木×接穗×环境相互作用导致表型变异的潜在机制,必将有助于开发和利用砧木以保障粮食安全。