Horticultural Plant Journal (Mar 2024)

Insights into the dwarfing mechanism of pear (Pyrus betulaefolia) based on anatomical and structural analysis using X-ray scanning

  • Lili Dong,
  • Chuxuan Yang,
  • Jing Wang,
  • Jingjing Li,
  • Mei Zhao,
  • Dingli Li,
  • Zhiyun Qiu,
  • Chunhui Ma,
  • Zhenhua Cui

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 2
pp. 355 – 366

Abstract

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The lack of a suitable rootstock to control scion growth has limited the development of high-density plantations in pear production, which is partly attributed to poor understanding of the dwarfing mechanism. In the present study, the rootstock of the dwarf-type pear (Pyrus betulaefolia) ‘PY-9’ was identified and used as the material for anatomical analysis. ‘PY-9’ grew to half the tree height of the normal cultivar ‘Zhengdu’, along with fewer internodes and shorter length. Significant differences in growth rate between ‘PY-9’ and ‘Zhengdu’ were detected at approximately 30 days after full bloom, which corresponded with the time of the greatest difference in water potential between the dwarf and normal cultivar. ‘PY-9’ showed a higher photosynthetic rate than ‘Zhengdu’. Anatomical analysis showed that ‘PY-9’ had higher area ratios of both phloem and xylem and more developed vascular tissues than ‘Zhengdu’. The three-dimensional reconstructed skeleton of the xylem from X-ray computed tomography scanning revealed greater intervessel connectivity in ‘Zhengdu’ than in ‘PY-9’, which could contribute to the more vigorous growth of ‘Zhengdu’. This study thus provides the first comparison of the microstructural properties of xylem elements between a dwarfing-type and vigorous-type pear rootstock, providing new insights into the dwarfing mechanism in pear and facilitating breeding of dwarf pear rootstocks to increase crop productivity.

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