Leaf cell wall properties and stomatal density influence oxygen isotope
enrichment of leaf water
Abstract
Oxygen isotopic composition (Δ18OLW)
of leaf water can help improve our understanding of how anatomy
interacts with physiology to influence leaf water transport. Leaf water
isotope models of Δ18OLW such as the
Péclet effect model have been developed to predict
Δ18OLW, and it incorporates
transpiration rate (E) and the mixing length between unenriched
xylem water and enriched mesophyll water, which can occur in the
mesophyll (Lm) or veins
(Lv). Here we used two cell wall composition
mutants grown under two light intensities and RH to evaluate the effect
of cell wall composition on Δ18OLW. In
maize (Zea mays), the compromised ultrastructure of the suberin
lamellae in the bundle sheath of the ALIPHATIC SUBERIN FERULOYL
TRANSFERASE mutant (Zmasft) reduced barriers to apoplastic water
movement, resulting in higher E and Lv
and, consequently, lower Δ18OLW. In
cellulose synthase-like F6 (Cslf6) mutants and wildtype of rice
(Oryza sativa), the difference in
Δ18OLW in plants grown under high and
low growth light intensity co-varied with their differences in stomatal
density. These results show that cell wall composition and stomatal
density influence Δ18OLW by altering
the Péclet effect and that stable isotopes can facilitate the
development of a physiologically and anatomically explicit water
transport model.