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Nitrogen assimilation and transpiration: key processes conditioning responsiveness of wheat to elevated [CO2] and temperature

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Nitrogen assimilation and transpiration: key processes conditioning responsiveness of wheat to elevated [CO2] and temperature. / Jauregui, Ivan; Aroca, Ricardo; Garnica, María et al.
In: Physiologia Plantarum, Vol. 155, No. 3, 11.2015, p. 338-354.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Jauregui, I, Aroca, R, Garnica, M, Zamarreño, ÁM, García-Mina, JM, Serret, MD, Parry, M, Irigoyen, JJ & Aranjuelo, I 2015, 'Nitrogen assimilation and transpiration: key processes conditioning responsiveness of wheat to elevated [CO2] and temperature', Physiologia Plantarum, vol. 155, no. 3, pp. 338-354. https://doi.org/10.1111/ppl.12345

APA

Jauregui, I., Aroca, R., Garnica, M., Zamarreño, Á. M., García-Mina, J. M., Serret, M. D., Parry, M., Irigoyen, J. J., & Aranjuelo, I. (2015). Nitrogen assimilation and transpiration: key processes conditioning responsiveness of wheat to elevated [CO2] and temperature. Physiologia Plantarum, 155(3), 338-354. https://doi.org/10.1111/ppl.12345

Vancouver

Jauregui I, Aroca R, Garnica M, Zamarreño ÁM, García-Mina JM, Serret MD et al. Nitrogen assimilation and transpiration: key processes conditioning responsiveness of wheat to elevated [CO2] and temperature. Physiologia Plantarum. 2015 Nov;155(3):338-354. Epub 2015 May 28. doi: 10.1111/ppl.12345

Author

Jauregui, Ivan ; Aroca, Ricardo ; Garnica, María et al. / Nitrogen assimilation and transpiration : key processes conditioning responsiveness of wheat to elevated [CO2] and temperature. In: Physiologia Plantarum. 2015 ; Vol. 155, No. 3. pp. 338-354.

Bibtex

@article{348fd7378dd24184a400d981205eefea,
title = "Nitrogen assimilation and transpiration: key processes conditioning responsiveness of wheat to elevated [CO2] and temperature",
abstract = "Although climate scenarios have predicted an increase in [CO2] and temperature conditions, to date few experiments have focused on the interaction of [CO2] and temperature effects in wheat development. Recent evidence suggests that photosynthetic acclimation is linked to the photorespiration and N assimilation inhibition of plants exposed to elevated CO2. The main goal of this study was to analyze the effect of interacting [CO2] and temperature on leaf photorespiration, C/N metabolism and N transport in wheat plants exposed to elevated [CO2] and temperature conditions. For this purpose, wheat plants were exposed to elevated [CO2] (400 vs 700 µmol mol−1) and temperature (ambient vs ambient + 4°C) in CO2 gradient greenhouses during the entire life cycle. Although at the agronomic level, elevated temperature had no effect on plant biomass, physiological analyses revealed that combined elevated [CO2] and temperature negatively affected photosynthetic performance. The limited energy levels resulting from the reduced respiratory and photorespiration rates of such plants were apparently inadequate to sustain nitrate reductase activity. Inhibited N assimilation was associated with a strong reduction in amino acid content, conditioned leaf soluble protein content and constrained leaf N status. Therefore, the plant response to elevated [CO2] and elevated temperature resulted in photosynthetic acclimation. The reduction in transpiration rates induced limitations in nutrient transport in leaves of plants exposed to elevated [CO2] and temperature, led to mineral depletion and therefore contributed to the inhibition of photosynthetic activity.",
author = "Ivan Jauregui and Ricardo Aroca and Mar{\'i}a Garnica and Zamarre{\~n}o, {{\'A}ngel M.} and Garc{\'i}a-Mina, {Jos{\'e} M.} and Serret, {Maria D.} and Martin Parry and Irigoyen, {Juan J.} and Iker Aranjuelo",
year = "2015",
month = nov,
doi = "10.1111/ppl.12345",
language = "English",
volume = "155",
pages = "338--354",
journal = "Physiologia Plantarum",
issn = "0031-9317",
publisher = "Blackwell-Wiley",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Nitrogen assimilation and transpiration

T2 - key processes conditioning responsiveness of wheat to elevated [CO2] and temperature

AU - Jauregui, Ivan

AU - Aroca, Ricardo

AU - Garnica, María

AU - Zamarreño, Ángel M.

AU - García-Mina, José M.

AU - Serret, Maria D.

AU - Parry, Martin

AU - Irigoyen, Juan J.

AU - Aranjuelo, Iker

PY - 2015/11

Y1 - 2015/11

N2 - Although climate scenarios have predicted an increase in [CO2] and temperature conditions, to date few experiments have focused on the interaction of [CO2] and temperature effects in wheat development. Recent evidence suggests that photosynthetic acclimation is linked to the photorespiration and N assimilation inhibition of plants exposed to elevated CO2. The main goal of this study was to analyze the effect of interacting [CO2] and temperature on leaf photorespiration, C/N metabolism and N transport in wheat plants exposed to elevated [CO2] and temperature conditions. For this purpose, wheat plants were exposed to elevated [CO2] (400 vs 700 µmol mol−1) and temperature (ambient vs ambient + 4°C) in CO2 gradient greenhouses during the entire life cycle. Although at the agronomic level, elevated temperature had no effect on plant biomass, physiological analyses revealed that combined elevated [CO2] and temperature negatively affected photosynthetic performance. The limited energy levels resulting from the reduced respiratory and photorespiration rates of such plants were apparently inadequate to sustain nitrate reductase activity. Inhibited N assimilation was associated with a strong reduction in amino acid content, conditioned leaf soluble protein content and constrained leaf N status. Therefore, the plant response to elevated [CO2] and elevated temperature resulted in photosynthetic acclimation. The reduction in transpiration rates induced limitations in nutrient transport in leaves of plants exposed to elevated [CO2] and temperature, led to mineral depletion and therefore contributed to the inhibition of photosynthetic activity.

AB - Although climate scenarios have predicted an increase in [CO2] and temperature conditions, to date few experiments have focused on the interaction of [CO2] and temperature effects in wheat development. Recent evidence suggests that photosynthetic acclimation is linked to the photorespiration and N assimilation inhibition of plants exposed to elevated CO2. The main goal of this study was to analyze the effect of interacting [CO2] and temperature on leaf photorespiration, C/N metabolism and N transport in wheat plants exposed to elevated [CO2] and temperature conditions. For this purpose, wheat plants were exposed to elevated [CO2] (400 vs 700 µmol mol−1) and temperature (ambient vs ambient + 4°C) in CO2 gradient greenhouses during the entire life cycle. Although at the agronomic level, elevated temperature had no effect on plant biomass, physiological analyses revealed that combined elevated [CO2] and temperature negatively affected photosynthetic performance. The limited energy levels resulting from the reduced respiratory and photorespiration rates of such plants were apparently inadequate to sustain nitrate reductase activity. Inhibited N assimilation was associated with a strong reduction in amino acid content, conditioned leaf soluble protein content and constrained leaf N status. Therefore, the plant response to elevated [CO2] and elevated temperature resulted in photosynthetic acclimation. The reduction in transpiration rates induced limitations in nutrient transport in leaves of plants exposed to elevated [CO2] and temperature, led to mineral depletion and therefore contributed to the inhibition of photosynthetic activity.

U2 - 10.1111/ppl.12345

DO - 10.1111/ppl.12345

M3 - Journal article

VL - 155

SP - 338

EP - 354

JO - Physiologia Plantarum

JF - Physiologia Plantarum

SN - 0031-9317

IS - 3

ER -