Yin Melinda H, Vargas Ana I, Fuentealba Claudia, Shahid Muhammad A, Bassil Elias, Schaffer Bruce
Tropical Research and Education Center, University of Florida, 18905 S.W. 280 Street, Homestead, FL, 33031, USA.
Escuela de Alimentos, Facultad de Ciencias Agronómicas y de los Alimentos, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Valparaíso, Waddington 716, Playa Ancha, Valparaíso, Chile.
Plant Physiol Biochem. 2023 Mar;196:925-939. doi: 10.1016/j.plaphy.2023.02.032. Epub 2023 Feb 23.
Avocado (P. americana Mill.) trees are classified into three botanical races, Mexican (M), Guatemalan (G), and West Indian (WI), each distinguished by their geographical centers of origin. While avocados are considered highly sensitive to flooding stress, comparative responses of the different races to short-term flooding are not known. This study assessed the differences in physiological and biochemical responses among clonal, non-grafted avocado cultivars of each race to short-term (2-3 days) flooding. In two separate experiments, each with different cultivars of each race, container-grown trees were divided into two treatments: 1) flooded and 2) non-flooded. Net CO assimilation (A), stomatal conductance (g), and transpiration (Tr) were measured periodically over time beginning the day before treatments were imposed, through the flooding period, and during a recovery period (after unflooding). At the end of the experiments, concentrations of sugars in leaves, stems, and roots, and reactive oxygen species (ROS), antioxidants, and osmolytes in leaves and roots were determined. Guatemalan trees were more sensitive to short-term flooding than M or WI trees based on decreased A, g, and Tr and survival of flooded trees. Guatemalan trees generally had less partitioning of sugars, particularly mannoheptulose, to the roots of flooded compared to non-flooded trees. Principal component analysis showed distinct clustering of flooded trees by race based on ROS and antioxidant profiles. Thus, differential partitioning of sugars and ROS and antioxidant responses to flooding among races may explain the greater flooding sensitivity of G trees compared to M and WI trees.
鳄梨树(Persea americana Mill.)分为三个植物种族,即墨西哥(M)、危地马拉(G)和西印度(WI),每个种族都以其地理起源中心而区分。虽然鳄梨被认为对淹水胁迫高度敏感,但不同种族对短期淹水的比较反应尚不清楚。本研究评估了每个种族的无性系、未嫁接鳄梨品种对短期(2 - 3天)淹水的生理和生化反应差异。在两个独立的实验中,每个实验使用每个种族的不同品种,将盆栽树分为两种处理:1)淹水和2)未淹水。从处理前一天开始,经过淹水期和恢复期(解除淹水后),定期测量净二氧化碳同化率(A)、气孔导度(g)和蒸腾作用(Tr)。在实验结束时,测定叶片、茎和根中的糖浓度,以及叶片和根中的活性氧(ROS)、抗氧化剂和渗透调节物质。基于A、g和Tr的降低以及淹水树的存活率,危地马拉树比M或WI树对短期淹水更敏感。与未淹水的树相比,危地马拉树通常向淹水树根部分配的糖较少,尤其是甘露庚酮糖。主成分分析表明,基于ROS和抗氧化剂谱,淹水树按种族明显聚类。因此,不同种族之间糖的差异分配以及ROS和抗氧化剂对淹水的反应可能解释了G树比M和WI树对淹水更敏感的原因。