Rice (Jun 2024)

Autotetraploidy of rice does not potentiate the tolerance to drought stress in the seedling stage

  • Shunwu Yu,
  • Tianfei Li,
  • Xiaoying Teng,
  • Fangwen Yang,
  • Xiaosong Ma,
  • Jing Han,
  • Li Zhou,
  • Zhijuan Bian,
  • Haibin Wei,
  • Hui Deng,
  • Yongsheng Zhu,
  • Xinqiao Yu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12284-024-00716-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 1
pp. 1 – 16

Abstract

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Abstract Polyploid is considered an advantage that has evolved to be more environmentally adaptable than its diploid. To understand if doubled chromosome of diploid rice can improve drought tolerance, we evaluated the diploid (2X) and autotetraploid (4X) plants of three indica and three japonica varieties. Drought stress in the plastic bucket of four-leaf stage revealed that the drought tolerance of 4X plants was lower than that of its diploid donor plants. The assay of photosynthetic rate of all varieties showed that all 4X varieties had lower rates than their diploid donors. The capacity for reactive oxygen species production and scavenging varied among different 2X and 4X varieties. Further, transcriptomic analysis of 2X and 4X plants of four varieties under normal and drought condition showed that the wide variation of gene expression was caused by difference of varieties, not by chromosome ploidy. However, weighted gene co-expression network analysis (WGCNA) revealed that the severe interference of photosynthesis-related genes in tetraploid plants under drought stress is the primary reason for the decrease of drought tolerance in autotetraploid lines. Consistently, new transcripts analysis in autotetraploid revealed that the gene transcription related with mitochondrion and plastid of cell component was influenced most significantly. The results indicated that chromosome doubling of diploid rice weakened their drought tolerance, primarily due to disorder of photosynthesis-related genes in tetraploid plants under drought stress. Maintain tetraploid drought tolerance through chromosome doubling breeding in rice needs to start with the selection of parental varieties and more efforts.