Response of Organ Structure and Physiology to Autotetraploidization in Early Development of Energy Willow Salix viminalis |
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Authors: | Dénes Dudits Katalin T?r?k András Cseri Kenny Paul Anna V. Nagy Bettina Nagy László Sass Gy?rgyi Ferenc Radomira Vankova Petre Dobrev Imre Vass Ferhan Ayaydin |
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Affiliation: | Institute of Plant Biology, Biological Research Centre, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, 6726 Szeged, Hungary (D.D., K.T., A.C., K.P., A.V.N., B.N., L.S., G.F., I.V., F.A.); and;Institute of Experimental Botany, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, Prague, Czech Republic (R.V., P.D.) |
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Abstract: | The biomass productivity of the energy willow Salix viminalis as a short-rotation woody crop depends on organ structure and functions that are under the control of genome size. Colchicine treatment of axillary buds resulted in a set of autotetraploid S. viminalis var. Energo genotypes (polyploid Energo [PP-E]; 2n = 4x = 76) with variation in the green pixel-based shoot surface area. In cases where increased shoot biomass was observed, it was primarily derived from larger leaf size and wider stem diameter. Autotetraploidy slowed primary growth and increased shoot diameter (a parameter of secondary growth). The duplicated genome size enlarged bark and wood layers in twigs sampled in the field. The PP-E plants developed wider leaves with thicker midrib and enlarged palisade parenchyma cells. Autotetraploid leaves contained significantly increased amounts of active gibberellins, cytokinins, salicylic acid, and jasmonate compared with diploid individuals. Greater net photosynthetic CO2 uptake was detected in leaves of PP-E plants with increased chlorophyll and carotenoid contents. Improved photosynthetic functions in tetraploids were also shown by more efficient electron transport rates of photosystems I and II. Autotetraploidization increased the biomass of the root system of PP-E plants relative to diploids. Sections of tetraploid roots showed thickening with enlarged cortex cells. Elevated amounts of indole acetic acid, active cytokinins, active gibberellin, and salicylic acid were detected in the root tips of these plants. The presented variation in traits of tetraploid willow genotypes provides a basis to use autopolyploidization as a chromosome engineering technique to alter the organ development of energy plants in order to improve biomass productivity.Energy security and climate change as global problems urge increased efforts to use plants as renewable energy sources both for power generation and transportation fuel production. Selected wood species, such as willows (Salix spp.), can be cultivated as short-rotation coppice for the rapid accumulation of biomass and reduction of CO2 emission. Coppicing reinvigorates shoot growth, resulting in a special woody plant life cycle that differs from natural tree development, which takes decades. In this cultivation system, small stem cuttings are planted at high densities (15,000–25,000 ha−1). In the soil, these dormant wood cuttings first produce roots and shoots that emerge from reactivated buds. During the first year, the growing shoots mature to woody stems. In the winter, these stems are cut back, and in the following spring, the cut stumps develop multiple shoots. The short-rotation coppice plantations are characterized by a very short, 2- to 3-year rotation, and the most productive varieties can produce up to 15 tons of oven-dried wood per hectare per year (Cunniff and Cerasuolo, 2011). The high-density willow plantations can also be efficiently used for heavy metal or organic phytoremediation, as reviewed by Marmiroli et al. (2011).The biomass productivity of shrub willows is largely dependent on coppicing capability, early vigorous growth, shoot growth rate and final stem height, root system size, photosynthetic efficiency, formation and composition of woody stems, water and nutrient use, as well as abiotic and biotic stress tolerance. Genetic improvement of all these traits can be based on broad natural genetic resources represented by more than 400 species in the genus Salix. More than 200 species have hybrid origins, and ploidy levels vary from diploid up to dodecaploid (Suda and Argus, 1968; Newsholme, 1992). In addition to molecular marker-assisted clone selection, intraspecific and interspecific crosses have been shown to further extend genetic variability in breeding programs for biomass yield (Karp et al., 2011).During natural diversification and artificial crossings of Salix spp., the willow genomes frequently undergo polyploidization, resulting in triploid or tetraploid allopolyploids. In triploid hybrids, both heterosis and ploidy can contribute to the improved biomass yield (Serapiglia et al., 2014). While the alloploid triploids have attracted considerable attention in willow improvement, the potentials of autotetraploid willow genotypes have not been exploited so far. As shown for other short-rotation wood species (poplar [Populus spp.], black locust [Robinia pseudoacacia], Paulownia spp., and birch [Betula spp.]), doubling the chromosome set by colchicine treatment can cause significant changes in organ morphology or growth parameters (Tang et al., 2010; Cai and Kang, 2011; Harbard et al., 2012; Mu et al., 2012; Wang et al., 2013a, 2013b). In several polyploidization protocols, the in vitro cultured tissues are exposed to different doses of colchicine or other inhibitors of mitotic microtubule function, and plantlets are differentiated from polyploid somatic cells (Tang et al., 2010; Cai and Kang, 2011). Alternatively, seeds or apical meristems of germinating seedlings can be treated with a colchicine solution (Harbard et al., 2012). Allotetraploids of poplar were produced by zygotic chromosome doubling that was induced by colchicine and high-temperature treatment (Wang et al., 2013a).Since tetraploid willow plants with 2n = 4x = 76 chromosomes are expected to represent novel genetic variability, especially for organ development and physiological parameters, a polyploidization project was initiated that was based on a highly productive diploid energy willow (S. viminalis var. Energo). Colchicine treatment of reactivated axillary buds of the in vitro-grown energy willow plantlets resulted in autotetraploid shoots and, subsequently, plants. For comparison of diploid and tetraploid variants of willow plants, digital imaging of green organs and roots was used for phenotyping. Among the tetraploid lines, genotypes were identified with improved biomass production, better photosynthetic parameters, and altered organ structure and hormone composition. The new tetraploid willow variants produced can serve as a unique experimental material to uncover key factors in biomass production in this short-rotation energy plant. In the future, these plants can also serve as crossing partners of diploid lines for the production of novel triploid energy willow genotypes. |
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