PHENOPSIS, an automated platform for reproducible phenotyping of plant responses to soil water deficit in Arabidopsis thaliana permitted the identification of an accession with low sensitivity to soil water deficit

被引:392
作者
Granier, C [1 ]
Aguirrezabal, L [1 ]
Chenu, K [1 ]
Cookson, SJ [1 ]
Dauzat, M [1 ]
Hamard, P [1 ]
Thioux, JJ [1 ]
Rolland, G [1 ]
Bouchier-Combaud, S [1 ]
Lebaudy, A [1 ]
Muller, B [1 ]
Simonneau, T [1 ]
Tardieu, F [1 ]
机构
[1] INRA, Lab Ecophysiol Plantes Stress Environm, UMR 759, Ecole Natl Super Agron, F-34060 Montpellier 1, France
关键词
Arabidopsis thaliana; automatic processing; genetic variability; leaf development; phenotypic analysis; water deficit;
D O I
10.1111/j.1469-8137.2005.01609.x
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
The high-throughput phenotypic analysis of Arabidopsis thaliana collections requires methodological progress and automation. Methods to impose stable and reproducible soil water deficits are presented and were used to analyse plant responses to water stress. Several potential complications and methodological difficulties were identified, including the spatial and temporal variability of micrometeorological conditions within a growth chamber, the difference in soil water depletion rates between accessions and the differences in developmental stage of accessions the same time after sowing. Solutions were found. Nine accessions were grown in four experiments in a rigorously controlled growth-chamber equipped with an automated system to control soil water content and take pictures of individual plants. One accession, An1, was unaffected by water deficit in terms of leaf number, leaf area, root growth and transpiration rate per unit leaf area. Methods developed here will help identify quantitative trait loci and genes involved in plant tolerance to water deficit.
引用
收藏
页码:623 / 635
页数:13
相关论文
共 37 条
  • [1] Borel C, 2001, J EXP BOT, V52, P427, DOI 10.1093/jexbot/52.suppl_1.427
  • [2] Growth stage-based phenotypic analysis of arabidopsis:: A model for high throughput functional genomics in plants
    Boyes, DC
    Zayed, AM
    Ascenzi, R
    McCaskill, AJ
    Hoffman, NE
    Davis, KR
    Görlach, J
    [J]. PLANT CELL, 2001, 13 (07) : 1499 - 1510
  • [3] Genes commonly regulated by water-deficit stress in Arabidopsis thaliana
    Bray, EA
    [J]. JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BOTANY, 2004, 55 (407) : 2331 - 2341
  • [4] Correlation between leaf growth variables suggest intrinsic and early controls of leaf size in Arabidopsis thaliana
    Cookson, SJ
    Van Lijsebettens, M
    Granier, C
    [J]. PLANT CELL AND ENVIRONMENT, 2005, 28 (11) : 1355 - 1366
  • [5] Quantitative trait locus analysis of growth-related traits in a new Arabidopsis recombinant
    El-Lithy, ME
    Clerkx, EJM
    Ruys, GJ
    Koornneef, M
    Vreugdenhil, D
    [J]. PLANT PHYSIOLOGY, 2004, 135 (01) : 444 - 458
  • [6] Falconer D.S., 1996, Quantitative Genetics, V4th
  • [7] Water deficit and spatial pattern of leaf development. Variability in responses can be simulated using a simple model of leaf development
    Granier, C
    Tardieu, F
    [J]. PLANT PHYSIOLOGY, 1999, 119 (02) : 609 - 619
  • [8] Is thermal time adequate for expressing the effects of temperature on sunflower leaf development?
    Granier, C
    Tardieu, F
    [J]. PLANT CELL AND ENVIRONMENT, 1998, 21 (07) : 695 - 703
  • [9] Individual leaf development in Arabidopsis thaliana:: a stable thermal-time-based programme
    Granier, C
    Massonnet, C
    Turc, O
    Muller, B
    Chenu, K
    Tardieu, F
    [J]. ANNALS OF BOTANY, 2002, 89 (05) : 595 - 604
  • [10] On systems thinking, systems biology, and the in silico plant
    Hammer, GL
    Sinclair, TR
    Chapman, SC
    van Oosterom, E
    [J]. PLANT PHYSIOLOGY, 2004, 134 (03) : 909 - 911