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Effect of Late Planting and Shading on Cellulose Synthesis during Cotton Fiber Secondary Wall Development

Cotton-rapeseed or cotton-wheat double cropping systems are popular in the Yangtze River Valley and Yellow River Valley of China. Due to the competition of temperature and light resources during the growing season of double cropping system, cotton is generally late-germinating and late-maturing and...

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Autores principales: Chen, Ji, Lv, Fengjuan, Liu, Jingran, Ma, Yina, Wang, Youhua, Chen, Binglin, Meng, Yali, Zhou, Zhiguo, Oosterhuis, Derrick M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4136859/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25133819
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0105088
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author Chen, Ji
Lv, Fengjuan
Liu, Jingran
Ma, Yina
Wang, Youhua
Chen, Binglin
Meng, Yali
Zhou, Zhiguo
Oosterhuis, Derrick M.
author_facet Chen, Ji
Lv, Fengjuan
Liu, Jingran
Ma, Yina
Wang, Youhua
Chen, Binglin
Meng, Yali
Zhou, Zhiguo
Oosterhuis, Derrick M.
author_sort Chen, Ji
collection PubMed
description Cotton-rapeseed or cotton-wheat double cropping systems are popular in the Yangtze River Valley and Yellow River Valley of China. Due to the competition of temperature and light resources during the growing season of double cropping system, cotton is generally late-germinating and late-maturing and has to suffer from the coupling of declining temperature and low light especially in the late growth stage. In this study, late planting (LP) and shading were used to fit the coupling stress, and the coupling effect on fiber cellulose synthesis was investigated. Two cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.) cultivars were grown in the field in 2010 and 2011 at three planting dates (25 April, 25 May and 10 June) each with three shading levels (normal light, declined 20% and 40% PAR). Mean daily minimum temperature was the primary environmental factor affected by LP. The coupling of LP and shading (decreased cellulose content by 7.8%–25.5%) produced more severe impacts on cellulose synthesis than either stress alone, and the effect of LP (decreased cellulose content by 6.7%–20.9%) was greater than shading (decreased cellulose content by 0.7%–5.6%). The coupling of LP and shading hindered the flux from sucrose to cellulose by affecting the activities of related cellulose synthesis enzymes. Fiber cellulose synthase genes expression were delayed under not only LP but shading, and the coupling of LP and shading markedly postponed and even restrained its expression. The decline of sucrose-phosphate synthase activity and its peak delay may cause cellulose synthesis being more sensitive to the coupling stress during the later stage of fiber secondary wall development (38–45 days post-anthesis). The sensitive difference of cellulose synthesis between two cultivars in response to the coupling of LP and shading may be mainly determined by the sensitiveness of invertase, sucrose-phosphate synthase and cellulose synthase.
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spelling pubmed-41368592014-08-20 Effect of Late Planting and Shading on Cellulose Synthesis during Cotton Fiber Secondary Wall Development Chen, Ji Lv, Fengjuan Liu, Jingran Ma, Yina Wang, Youhua Chen, Binglin Meng, Yali Zhou, Zhiguo Oosterhuis, Derrick M. PLoS One Research Article Cotton-rapeseed or cotton-wheat double cropping systems are popular in the Yangtze River Valley and Yellow River Valley of China. Due to the competition of temperature and light resources during the growing season of double cropping system, cotton is generally late-germinating and late-maturing and has to suffer from the coupling of declining temperature and low light especially in the late growth stage. In this study, late planting (LP) and shading were used to fit the coupling stress, and the coupling effect on fiber cellulose synthesis was investigated. Two cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.) cultivars were grown in the field in 2010 and 2011 at three planting dates (25 April, 25 May and 10 June) each with three shading levels (normal light, declined 20% and 40% PAR). Mean daily minimum temperature was the primary environmental factor affected by LP. The coupling of LP and shading (decreased cellulose content by 7.8%–25.5%) produced more severe impacts on cellulose synthesis than either stress alone, and the effect of LP (decreased cellulose content by 6.7%–20.9%) was greater than shading (decreased cellulose content by 0.7%–5.6%). The coupling of LP and shading hindered the flux from sucrose to cellulose by affecting the activities of related cellulose synthesis enzymes. Fiber cellulose synthase genes expression were delayed under not only LP but shading, and the coupling of LP and shading markedly postponed and even restrained its expression. The decline of sucrose-phosphate synthase activity and its peak delay may cause cellulose synthesis being more sensitive to the coupling stress during the later stage of fiber secondary wall development (38–45 days post-anthesis). The sensitive difference of cellulose synthesis between two cultivars in response to the coupling of LP and shading may be mainly determined by the sensitiveness of invertase, sucrose-phosphate synthase and cellulose synthase. Public Library of Science 2014-08-18 /pmc/articles/PMC4136859/ /pubmed/25133819 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0105088 Text en © 2014 Chen et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Chen, Ji
Lv, Fengjuan
Liu, Jingran
Ma, Yina
Wang, Youhua
Chen, Binglin
Meng, Yali
Zhou, Zhiguo
Oosterhuis, Derrick M.
Effect of Late Planting and Shading on Cellulose Synthesis during Cotton Fiber Secondary Wall Development
title Effect of Late Planting and Shading on Cellulose Synthesis during Cotton Fiber Secondary Wall Development
title_full Effect of Late Planting and Shading on Cellulose Synthesis during Cotton Fiber Secondary Wall Development
title_fullStr Effect of Late Planting and Shading on Cellulose Synthesis during Cotton Fiber Secondary Wall Development
title_full_unstemmed Effect of Late Planting and Shading on Cellulose Synthesis during Cotton Fiber Secondary Wall Development
title_short Effect of Late Planting and Shading on Cellulose Synthesis during Cotton Fiber Secondary Wall Development
title_sort effect of late planting and shading on cellulose synthesis during cotton fiber secondary wall development
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4136859/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25133819
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0105088
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