Water stress inhibits hydraulic conductance and leaf growth in rice seedlings but not the transport of water via mercury-sensitive water channels in the root
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作者:
Lu, ZJ
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Technion Israel Inst Technol, Plant Physiol Lab, Lowdermilk Fac Agr Engn, IL-32000 Haifa, IsraelTechnion Israel Inst Technol, Plant Physiol Lab, Lowdermilk Fac Agr Engn, IL-32000 Haifa, Israel
Lu, ZJ
[1
]
Neumann, PM
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Technion Israel Inst Technol, Plant Physiol Lab, Lowdermilk Fac Agr Engn, IL-32000 Haifa, IsraelTechnion Israel Inst Technol, Plant Physiol Lab, Lowdermilk Fac Agr Engn, IL-32000 Haifa, Israel
Neumann, PM
[1
]
机构:
[1] Technion Israel Inst Technol, Plant Physiol Lab, Lowdermilk Fac Agr Engn, IL-32000 Haifa, Israel
The mechanisms by which moderate water stress (adding polyethylene glycol 6000 to the root medium) induces a sustained inhibition of growth in emerging first leaves of intact rite (Oryza sativa) seedlings was investigated under growth-chamber conditions. Early (24 h) inhibition of leaf growth was not related to changes in root size or in osmotic potential gradients and cell wall-yielding characteristics in the leaf-expansion zone of stressed seedling. However, reductions in root-to-leaf hydraulic conductance (L) were measured in two rice cultivars after 4 or 24 h at various levels of water stress, and these reductions correlated well with the inhibition of leaf growth. We assayed L by a psychrometric method and, in intact seedlings, by a novel osmotic-jump method. The addition of 0.5 mM HgCl2 to the root medium to inhibit water transport through Hg-sensitive water channels in the roots did not inhibit lear growth in unstressed seedlings. However, both leaf growth and L were additionally reduced (by 49% and 43%, respectively) within minutes of adding HgCl2 to roots of water-stressed seedlings. Water stress therefore appeared to increase the transport of water via Hg-sensitive water channels. Other mechanisms were apparently involved in inhibiting overall L and leaf growth.