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Osmotic adjustment and the inhibition of leaf,root, stem and silk growth at low water potentials in maize
Authors:M. E. Westgate  J. S. Boyer
Affiliation:(1) Department of Agronomy, University of Illinois, 61801 Urbana, II, USA;(2) Department of Plant Biology, University of Illinois, 61801 Urbana, II, USA;(3) U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, University of Illinois, Urbana, II, USA;(4) Present address: North Central Soil Conservation Research Laboratory, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, 5626 Morris, MN, USA;(5) Present address: Department of Soil and Crop Sciences, Texas A & M University, 77843 College Station, TX, USA
Abstract:The expansion growth of plant organs is inhibited at low water potentials (PSgrw), but the inhibition has not been compared in different organs of the same plant. Therefore, we determined elongation rates of the roots, stems, leaves, and styles (silks) of maize (Zea mays L.) as soil water was depleted. The PSgrw was measured in the region of cell expansion of each organ. The complicating effects of transpiration were avoided by making measurements at the end of the dark period when the air had been saturated with water vapor for 10 h and transpiration was less than 1% of the rate in the light. Growth was inhibited as the PSgrw in the region of cell expansion decreased in each organ. The PSgrw required to stop growth was-0.50,-0.75, and-1.00 MPa, in this order, in the stem, silks, and leaves. However, the roots grew at these PSgrw and ceased only when PSgrw was lower than-1.4 MPa. The osmotic potential decreased in each region of cell expansion and, in leaves, roots and stems, the decrease was sufficient to maintain turgor fully. In the silks, the decrease was less and turgor fell. In the mature tissue, the PSgrw of the stem, leaves and roots was similar to that of the soil when adequate water was supplied. This indicated that an equilibrium existed between these tissues, the vascular system, and the soil. At the same time, the PSgrw was lower in the expanding regions than in the mature tissues, indicating that there was a PSgrw disequilibrium between the growing tissue and the vascular system. The disequilibrium was interpreted as a PSgrw gradient for supplying water to the enlarging cells. When water was withheld, this gradient disappeared in the leaf because PSgrw decreased more in the xylem than in the soil, indicating that a high flow resistance had developed in the xylem. In the roots, the gradient did not decrease because vascular PSgrw changed about the same amount as the soil PSgrw. Therefore, the gradient in PSgrw favored water uptake by roots but not leaves at low PSgrw. The data show that expansion growth responds to low PSgrw differently in different growing regions of the plant. Because growth depends on the maintenance of turgor for extending the cell walls and the presence of PSgrw gradients for supplying water to the expanding cells, several factors could have been responsible for these differences. The decrease of turgor in the silks and the loss of the PSgrw gradient in the leaves probably contributed to the high sensitivity of these organs. In the leaves, the gradient loss was so complete that it would have prevented growth regardless of other changes. In the roots, the maintenance of turgor and PSgrw gradients probably allowed growth to continue. This difference in turgor and gradient maintenance could contribute to the increase in root/shoot ratios generally observed in water-limited conditions.Symbols PSgrs osmotic potential - PSgrw water potential
Keywords:Cell enlargement  Osmotic adjustment  Turgor maintenance  Water potential gradients  Zea (osmotic adjustment)
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