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  • High-yielding rice Takanari...
    Adachi, Shunsuke; Tanaka, Yu; Miyagi, Atsuko; Kashima, Makoto; Tezuka, Ayumi; Toya, Yoshihiro; Kobayashi, Shunzo; Ohkubo, Satoshi; Shimizu, Hiroshi; Kawai-Yamada, Maki; Sage, Rowan F; Nagano, Atsushi J; Yamori, Wataru

    Journal of experimental botany, 10/2019, Volume: 70, Issue: 19
    Journal Article

    The high-yielding rice cultivar Takanari has fast photosynthetic induction owing to a high electron transport rate, stomatal conductance, and metabolic flux, leading to high daily carbon gain under fluctuating light. Abstract Leaves within crop canopies experience variable light over the course of a day, which greatly affects photosynthesis and crop productivity. Little is known about the mechanisms of the photosynthetic response to fluctuating light and their genetic control. Here, we examined gas exchange, metabolite levels, and chlorophyll fluorescence during the photosynthetic induction response in an Oryza sativa indica cultivar with high yield (Takanari) and a japonica cultivar with lower yield (Koshihikari). Takanari had a faster induction response to sudden increases in light intensity than Koshihikari, as demonstrated by faster increases in net CO2 assimilation rate, stomatal conductance, and electron transport rate. In a simulated light regime that mimicked a typical summer day, the faster induction response in Takanari increased daily CO2 assimilation by 10%. The faster response of Takanari was explained in part by its maintenance of a larger pool of Calvin–Benson cycle metabolites. Together, the rapid responses of electron transport rate, metabolic flux, and stomatal conductance in Takanari contributed to the greater daily carbon gain under fluctuating light typical of natural environments.