Suberin deficiency and its effect on the transport physiology of young poplar roots

Author:

Grünhofer Paul1ORCID,Heimerich Ines1,Pohl Svenja1,Oertel Marlene1,Meng Hongjun1ORCID,Zi Lin1ORCID,Lucignano Kevin1,Bokhari Syed Nadeem Hussain2ORCID,Guo Yayu3ORCID,Li Ruili3ORCID,Lin Jinxing3ORCID,Fladung Matthias4ORCID,Kreszies Tino5ORCID,Stöcker Tyll6ORCID,Schoof Heiko6ORCID,Schreiber Lukas1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ecophysiology, Institute of Cellular and Molecular Botany University of Bonn Kirschallee 1 53115 Bonn Germany

2. Department Plant Biophysics and Biochemistry, Institute of Plant Molecular Biology Czech Academy of Sciences, Biology Centre Branišovská 31/1160 CZ‐37005 České Budějovice Czech Republic

3. State Key Laboratory of Tree Genetics and Breeding, College of Biological Sciences and Technology Beijing Forestry University Beijing 100083 China

4. Thünen Institute of Forest Genetics Sieker Landstraße 2 22927 Grosshansdorf Germany

5. Department of Crop Sciences, Plant Nutrition and Crop Physiology University of Göttingen Carl‐Sprengel‐Weg 1 37075 Göttingen Germany

6. Department of Crop Bioinformatics, Institute of Crop Science and Resource Conservation University of Bonn Katzenburgweg 2 53115 Bonn Germany

Abstract

Summary The precise functions of suberized apoplastic barriers in root water and nutrient transport physiology have not fully been elucidated. While lots of research has been performed with mutants of Arabidopsis, little to no data are available for mutants of agricultural crop or tree species. By employing a combined set of physiological, histochemical, analytical, and transport physiological methods as well as RNA‐sequencing, this study investigated the implications of remarkable CRISPR/Cas9‐induced suberization defects in young roots of the economically important gray poplar. While barely affecting overall plant development, contrary to literature‐based expectations significant root suberin reductions of up to 80–95% in four independent mutants were shown to not evidently affect the root hydraulic conductivity during non‐stress conditions. In addition, subliminal iron deficiency symptoms and increased translocation of a photosynthesis inhibitor as well as NaCl highlight the involvement of suberin in nutrient transport physiology. The multifaceted nature of the root hydraulic conductivity does not allow drawing simplified conclusions such as that the suberin amount must always be correlated with the water transport properties of roots. However, the decreased masking of plasma membrane surface area could facilitate the uptake but also leakage of beneficial and harmful solutes.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

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