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Photosynthesis and growth in diverse willow genotypes

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Photosynthesis and growth in diverse willow genotypes. / Andralojc, P. John; Bencze, Szilvia; Madgwick, Pippa J. et al.
In: Food and Energy Security, Vol. 3, No. 2, 01.12.2014, p. 69-85.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Andralojc, PJ, Bencze, S, Madgwick, PJ, Philippe, H, Powers, SJ, Shield, I, Karp, A & Parry, MAJ 2014, 'Photosynthesis and growth in diverse willow genotypes', Food and Energy Security, vol. 3, no. 2, pp. 69-85. https://doi.org/10.1002/fes3.47

APA

Andralojc, P. J., Bencze, S., Madgwick, P. J., Philippe, H., Powers, S. J., Shield, I., Karp, A., & Parry, M. A. J. (2014). Photosynthesis and growth in diverse willow genotypes. Food and Energy Security, 3(2), 69-85. https://doi.org/10.1002/fes3.47

Vancouver

Andralojc PJ, Bencze S, Madgwick PJ, Philippe H, Powers SJ, Shield I et al. Photosynthesis and growth in diverse willow genotypes. Food and Energy Security. 2014 Dec 1;3(2):69-85. Epub 2014 Oct 10. doi: 10.1002/fes3.47

Author

Andralojc, P. John ; Bencze, Szilvia ; Madgwick, Pippa J. et al. / Photosynthesis and growth in diverse willow genotypes. In: Food and Energy Security. 2014 ; Vol. 3, No. 2. pp. 69-85.

Bibtex

@article{f026f96401bb4f05be9e9fa89d012653,
title = "Photosynthesis and growth in diverse willow genotypes",
abstract = "During a study of the contribution of photosynthetic traits to biomass yield among 11 diverse species of willow, the light and CO2 dependence of photosynthesis were found to differ, with absolute rates at ambient and saturating CO2, together with maximum rates of Rubsico-limited and electron-transport-limited photosynthesis (Vcmax and J, respectively) varying by factors in excess of 2 between the extremes of performance. In spite of this, the ratio, J/Vcmax – indicative of the relative investment of resource into RuBP regeneration and RuBP carboxylation – was found to fall within a narrow range (1.9–2.5) for all genotypes over two successive years. Photosynthetic rate (μmol CO2 fixed m−2 sec−1) showed a strong, inverse correlation with total leaf area per plant. Photosynthetic capacity, expressed on a leaf area basis, showed a strong, positive correlation with yield among some of the species, but when expressed on a whole plant basis all species indicated a positive correlation with yield. Thus, both leaf area per plant and photosynthetic rate per unit leaf area contribute to this relationship. The abundance and kinetic characteristics of Rubisco play a pivotal role in determining photosynthetic rate per unit leaf area and so were determined for the chosen willow species, in parallel with Rubisco large subunit (LSU) gene sequencing. Significant differences in the rate constants for carboxylation and oxygenation as well as the affinity for CO2 were identified, and rationalized in terms of LSU sequence polymorphism. Those LSU sequences with isoleucine instead of methionine at residue 309 had up to 29% higher carboxylase rate constants. Furthermore, the A/Ci curves predicted from each distinct set of Rubisco kinetic parameters under otherwise identical conditions indicated substantial differences in photosynthetic performance. Thus, genetic traits relating specifically to Rubisco and by implication to photosynthetic performance were also identified.",
author = "Andralojc, {P. John} and Szilvia Bencze and Madgwick, {Pippa J.} and H{\'e}l{\`e}ne Philippe and Powers, {Stephen J.} and Ian Shield and Angela Karp and Parry, {Martin A. J.}",
year = "2014",
month = dec,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1002/fes3.47",
language = "English",
volume = "3",
pages = "69--85",
journal = "Food and Energy Security",
issn = "2048-3694",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Ltd",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Photosynthesis and growth in diverse willow genotypes

AU - Andralojc, P. John

AU - Bencze, Szilvia

AU - Madgwick, Pippa J.

AU - Philippe, Hélène

AU - Powers, Stephen J.

AU - Shield, Ian

AU - Karp, Angela

AU - Parry, Martin A. J.

PY - 2014/12/1

Y1 - 2014/12/1

N2 - During a study of the contribution of photosynthetic traits to biomass yield among 11 diverse species of willow, the light and CO2 dependence of photosynthesis were found to differ, with absolute rates at ambient and saturating CO2, together with maximum rates of Rubsico-limited and electron-transport-limited photosynthesis (Vcmax and J, respectively) varying by factors in excess of 2 between the extremes of performance. In spite of this, the ratio, J/Vcmax – indicative of the relative investment of resource into RuBP regeneration and RuBP carboxylation – was found to fall within a narrow range (1.9–2.5) for all genotypes over two successive years. Photosynthetic rate (μmol CO2 fixed m−2 sec−1) showed a strong, inverse correlation with total leaf area per plant. Photosynthetic capacity, expressed on a leaf area basis, showed a strong, positive correlation with yield among some of the species, but when expressed on a whole plant basis all species indicated a positive correlation with yield. Thus, both leaf area per plant and photosynthetic rate per unit leaf area contribute to this relationship. The abundance and kinetic characteristics of Rubisco play a pivotal role in determining photosynthetic rate per unit leaf area and so were determined for the chosen willow species, in parallel with Rubisco large subunit (LSU) gene sequencing. Significant differences in the rate constants for carboxylation and oxygenation as well as the affinity for CO2 were identified, and rationalized in terms of LSU sequence polymorphism. Those LSU sequences with isoleucine instead of methionine at residue 309 had up to 29% higher carboxylase rate constants. Furthermore, the A/Ci curves predicted from each distinct set of Rubisco kinetic parameters under otherwise identical conditions indicated substantial differences in photosynthetic performance. Thus, genetic traits relating specifically to Rubisco and by implication to photosynthetic performance were also identified.

AB - During a study of the contribution of photosynthetic traits to biomass yield among 11 diverse species of willow, the light and CO2 dependence of photosynthesis were found to differ, with absolute rates at ambient and saturating CO2, together with maximum rates of Rubsico-limited and electron-transport-limited photosynthesis (Vcmax and J, respectively) varying by factors in excess of 2 between the extremes of performance. In spite of this, the ratio, J/Vcmax – indicative of the relative investment of resource into RuBP regeneration and RuBP carboxylation – was found to fall within a narrow range (1.9–2.5) for all genotypes over two successive years. Photosynthetic rate (μmol CO2 fixed m−2 sec−1) showed a strong, inverse correlation with total leaf area per plant. Photosynthetic capacity, expressed on a leaf area basis, showed a strong, positive correlation with yield among some of the species, but when expressed on a whole plant basis all species indicated a positive correlation with yield. Thus, both leaf area per plant and photosynthetic rate per unit leaf area contribute to this relationship. The abundance and kinetic characteristics of Rubisco play a pivotal role in determining photosynthetic rate per unit leaf area and so were determined for the chosen willow species, in parallel with Rubisco large subunit (LSU) gene sequencing. Significant differences in the rate constants for carboxylation and oxygenation as well as the affinity for CO2 were identified, and rationalized in terms of LSU sequence polymorphism. Those LSU sequences with isoleucine instead of methionine at residue 309 had up to 29% higher carboxylase rate constants. Furthermore, the A/Ci curves predicted from each distinct set of Rubisco kinetic parameters under otherwise identical conditions indicated substantial differences in photosynthetic performance. Thus, genetic traits relating specifically to Rubisco and by implication to photosynthetic performance were also identified.

U2 - 10.1002/fes3.47

DO - 10.1002/fes3.47

M3 - Journal article

VL - 3

SP - 69

EP - 85

JO - Food and Energy Security

JF - Food and Energy Security

SN - 2048-3694

IS - 2

ER -