Ved Parkash, John L Snider, Kelvin Jimmy Awori, Cristiane Pilon, Nino Brown, Ingrid Brito Almeida, Viktor Tishchenko
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Peanut (Arachis hypogaea L.) growth and photosynthetic response to high and low temperature extremes.
In some peanut (Arachis hypogaea L.) producing regions, growth and photosynthesis-limiting low and high temperature extremes are common. Heat acclimation potential of photosynthesis and respiration is a coping mechanism that is species-dependent and should be further explored for peanut. The objectives of the current study are (1) to evaluate the response of photosynthesis, its component processes, and respiration to low and high temperatures, and (2) to determine the heat acclimation potential of photosynthesis and respiration during early vegetative growth of peanut. Peanut was exposed to four different growth temperature regimes: (1) optimum temperature (30/20 °C day/night), (2) low temperature (20/15 °C), (3) moderately high temperature (35/25 °C), and (4) a high temperature extreme (40/30 °C). Low temperature and both high temperatures caused substantial reductions in growth and net photosynthetic rate. Mesophyll conductance and RuBP regeneration co-limited net photosynthetic rate under low temperature. Rubisco carboxylation was the most negatively impacted biochemical processes by high temperatures; however, diffusional limitations were not evident under high temperature conditions. Photosynthesis did not acclimate to high temperatures, while respiration and photorespiration exhibited heat acclimation. The inability of photosynthesis to acclimate to high temperature is likely a major constraint to early season growth in peanut.
期刊介绍:
Plant Physiology and Biochemistry publishes original theoretical, experimental and technical contributions in the various fields of plant physiology (biochemistry, physiology, structure, genetics, plant-microbe interactions, etc.) at diverse levels of integration (molecular, subcellular, cellular, organ, whole plant, environmental). Opinions expressed in the journal are the sole responsibility of the authors and publication does not imply the editors'' agreement.
Manuscripts describing molecular-genetic and/or gene expression data that are not integrated with biochemical analysis and/or actual measurements of plant physiological processes are not suitable for PPB. Also "Omics" studies (transcriptomics, proteomics, metabolomics, etc.) reporting descriptive analysis without an element of functional validation assays, will not be considered. Similarly, applied agronomic or phytochemical studies that generate no new, fundamental insights in plant physiological and/or biochemical processes are not suitable for publication in PPB.
Plant Physiology and Biochemistry publishes several types of articles: Reviews, Papers and Short Papers. Articles for Reviews are either invited by the editor or proposed by the authors for the editor''s prior agreement. Reviews should not exceed 40 typewritten pages and Short Papers no more than approximately 8 typewritten pages. The fundamental character of Plant Physiology and Biochemistry remains that of a journal for original results.