A reverse phenotyping approach identifies physiological differences
associated with yield under water stress in leading tomato introgression
lines.
Abstract
Sanbon Chaka Gosa1, Bogale Abebe Gebeyo12, Ravitejas Patil1, Ramón
Mencia1, Dani Zamir1, Menachem Moshelion1# 1 The R.H. Smith Institute
of Plant Sciences and Genetics in Agriculture, The R.H. Smith Faculty of
Agriculture, Food and Environment, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem,
Rehovot, 76100 Israel 2 Current address: Department of Horticulture,
College of Agriculture and Natural Resource, Dilla University, Dilla,
Ethiopia #Corresponding Author Abstract Plant productivity in general
and under stress, in particular, is a complex and comlitative trait
largely influenced by environmental conditions. Among the most important
traits are the whole-plant water-balance regulation mechanisms that
dynamically change in order to maximize the metabolic activity of the
plant. Due to the difficulty of high-throughput phenotyping of these
physiological traits (e.g. transpiration, stomatal conductance, and
photosynthesis), they are usually measured in static conditions or
modeled based on only a few measuring points (low resolution). To
overcome this challenge, we utilized a high-throughput gravimetric
functional-phenotyping platform (PlantArray) along with a practical
reverse phenotyping approach. We selected 30 tomato lines from multiple
years of field yield data and functionally phenotyped them for their
dynamic response curves using a variety of stress scenarios implemented
using drought conditions (each plant received irrigation based on the
amount of water it transpired). Our results show that resilient and
tolerable traits, in the field, are associated with stomatal plastic
conductance, i.e., maximum under well-irrigation, yet the rapid response
to changes in environmental conditions (soil and atmospheric). The
plastic traits of the idiotype lines were shown to increase water use
efficiency (momentarily), thus maximizing yield in water deficit
conditions. Based on manual characterizations of the idiotypes, it has
been found that their abaxial surfaces have a greater density of stomata
and a higher aperture during the early morning. Additionally, these
lines showed rapid recovery after a drought. Our study concluded that
reverse functional phenotyping can significantly reduce the pre-breading
processes for yield-related traits. Keywords: Functional phenotyping,
crops yield, —dynamic response, drought stress, stomatal conductance,
reverse phenomics