Limitations to leaf photosynthesis in field-grown grapevine under drought — metabolic and modelling approaches
João P. Maroco, M. Lucília Rodrigues, Carlos Lopes and M. Manuela Chaves
Functional Plant Biology 29(4) 451 - 459
Abstract
The effects of a slowly-imposed drought stress on gas-exchange, chlorophyll
a fluorescence, biochemical and physiological parameters
of Vitis vinifera L. leaves (cv. Aragonez, syn.
Tempranillo) growing in a commercial vineyard (South Portugal) were evaluated.
Relative to well-watered plants (predawn water potential,
ΨPD = –0.13 ± 0.01 MPa),
drought-stressed plants (ΨPD = –0.97
± 0.01 MPa) had lower photosynthetic rates (ca
70%), stomatal conductance, and PSII activity (associated with a higher
reduction of the quinone A pool and lower efficiency of PSII open centres).
Stomatal limitation to photosynthesis was increased in drought-stressed plants
relative to well-watered plants by ca 44%.
Modelled responses of net photosynthesis to internal CO2
indicated that drought-stressed plants had significant reductions in maximum
Rubisco carboxylation activity (ca 32%),
ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate regeneration (ca 27%),
and triose phosphate (triose-P) utilization rates (ca
37%) relative to well-watered plants. There was good agreement between
the effects of drought on modelled biochemical parameters, and
in vitro activities of key enzymes of carbon metabolism,
namely Rubisco, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, ribulose-5-phosphate
kinase and fructose-1,6-bisphosphate phosphatase. Quantum yields measured
under both ambient (35 Pa) and saturating CO2 (100 Pa)
for drought-stressed plants were decreased relative to well-watered plants, as
well as maximum photosynthetic rates measured at light and
CO2 saturating conditions (three times ambient
CO2 levels). Although stomatal closure was a strong
limitation to CO2 assimilation under drought, comparable
reductions in electron transport, CO2 carboxylation, and
utilization of triose-P capacities were also adaptations of the photosynthetic
machinery to dehydration that slowly developed under field conditions. Results
presented in this study confirm that modelling photosynthetic responses based
on gas-exchange data can be successfully used to predict metabolic limitations
to photosynthesis.
Keywords: drought, enzymes of carbon metabolism,
gas-exchange, modelling, photosynthesis,
Full text doi:10.1071/PP01040
© CSIRO 2002





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