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1.
Nat Genet ; 56(6): 1245-1256, 2024 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38778242

ABSTRACT

The maize root system has been reshaped by indirect selection during global adaptation to new agricultural environments. In this study, we characterized the root systems of more than 9,000 global maize accessions and its wild relatives, defining the geographical signature and genomic basis of variation in seminal root number. We demonstrate that seminal root number has increased during maize domestication followed by a decrease in response to limited water availability in locally adapted varieties. By combining environmental and phenotypic association analyses with linkage mapping, we identified genes linking environmental variation and seminal root number. Functional characterization of the transcription factor ZmHb77 and in silico root modeling provides evidence that reshaping root system architecture by reducing the number of seminal roots and promoting lateral root density is beneficial for the resilience of maize seedlings to drought.


Subject(s)
Adaptation, Physiological , Domestication , Droughts , Plant Roots , Seedlings , Water , Zea mays , Zea mays/genetics , Zea mays/physiology , Plant Roots/genetics , Plant Roots/growth & development , Adaptation, Physiological/genetics , Seedlings/genetics , Water/metabolism , Chromosome Mapping , Phenotype , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Plant Proteins/genetics , Transcription Factors/genetics , Transcription Factors/metabolism
2.
Evol Appl ; 17(3): e13673, 2024 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38468714

ABSTRACT

Mexican native maize (Zea mays ssp. mays) is adapted to a wide range of climatic and edaphic conditions. Here, we focus specifically on the potential role of root anatomical variation in this adaptation. Given the investment required to characterize root anatomy, we present a machine-learning approach using environmental descriptors to project trait variation from a relatively small training panel onto a larger panel of genotyped and georeferenced Mexican maize accessions. The resulting models defined potential biologically relevant clines across a complex environment that we used subsequently for genotype-environment association. We found evidence of systematic variation in maize root anatomy across Mexico, notably a prevalence of trait combinations favoring a reduction in axial hydraulic conductance in varieties sourced from cooler, drier highland areas. We discuss our results in the context of previously described water-banking strategies and present candidate genes that are associated with both root anatomical and environmental variation. Our strategy is a refinement of standard environmental genome-wide association analysis that is applicable whenever a training set of georeferenced phenotypic data is available.

3.
Plant Direct ; 5(7): e334, 2021 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34355112

ABSTRACT

Root hydraulic properties play a central role in the global water cycle, in agricultural systems productivity, and in ecosystem survival as they impact the canopy water supply. However, the existing experimental methods to quantify root hydraulic conductivities, such as the root pressure probing, are particularly challenging, and their applicability to thin roots and small root segments is limited. Therefore, there is a gap in methods enabling easy estimations of root hydraulic conductivities in diverse root types. Here, we present a new pipeline to quickly estimate root hydraulic conductivities across different root types, at high resolution along root axes. Shortly, free-hand root cross-sections were used to extract a selected number of key anatomical traits. We used these traits to parametrize the Generator of Root Anatomy in R (GRANAR) model to simulate root anatomical networks. Finally, we used these generated anatomical networks within the Model of Explicit Cross-section Hydraulic Anatomy (MECHA) to compute an estimation of the root axial and radial hydraulic conductivities (k x and k r , respectively). Using this combination of anatomical data and computational models, we were able to create a root hydraulic conductivity atlas at the root system level, for 14-day-old pot-grown Zea mays (maize) plants of the var. B73. The altas highlights the significant functional variations along and between different root types. For instance, predicted variations of radial conductivity along the root axis were strongly dependent on the maturation stage of hydrophobic barriers. The same was also true for the maturation rates of the metaxylem vessels. Differences in anatomical traits along and across root types generated substantial variations in radial and axial conductivities estimated with our novel approach. Our methodological pipeline combines anatomical data and computational models to turn root cross-section images into a detailed hydraulic atlas. It is an inexpensive, fast, and easily applicable investigation tool for root hydraulics that complements existing complex experimental methods. It opens the way to high-throughput studies on the functional importance of root types in plant hydraulics, especially if combined with novel phenotyping techniques such as laser ablation tomography.

4.
Plant Physiol ; 182(2): 707-720, 2020 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31744934

ABSTRACT

Root hydraulic conductivity is a limiting factor along the water pathways between the soil and the leaf, and root radial conductivity is itself defined by cell-scale hydraulic properties and anatomical features. However, quantifying the influence of anatomical features on the radial conductivity remains challenging due to complex time-consuming experimental procedures. We present an open-source computational tool, the Generator of Root Anatomy in R (GRANAR; http://granar.github.io), that can be used to rapidly generate digital versions of contrasted monocotyledon root anatomical networks. GRANAR uses a limited set of root anatomical parameters, easily acquired with existing image analysis tools. The generated anatomical network can then be used in combination with hydraulic models to estimate the corresponding hydraulic properties. We used GRANAR to reanalyze large maize (Zea mays) anatomical datasets from the literature. Our model was successful at creating virtual anatomies for each experimental observation. We also used GRANAR to generate anatomies not observed experimentally over wider ranges of anatomical parameters. The generated anatomies were then used to estimate the corresponding radial conductivities with the hydraulic model MECHA (model of explicit cross-section hydraulic architecture). Our simulations highlight the large importance of the width of the stele and the cortex. GRANAR is a computational tool that generates root anatomical networks from experimental data. It enables the quantification of the effect of individual anatomical features on the root radial conductivity.


Subject(s)
Plant Roots/anatomy & histology , Seeds/anatomy & histology , Zea mays/anatomy & histology , Biological Transport/physiology , Computer Simulation , Plant Cells/physiology , Plant Roots/physiology , Seeds/metabolism , Seeds/physiology , Software , Soil , Water/metabolism , Zea mays/physiology
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