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Published in Crop Sci. 44:131-143 (2004).
© 2004 Crop Science Society of America
677 S. Segoe Rd., Madison, WI 53711 USA

CROP PHYSIOLOGY & METABOLISM

Photosynthesis, Carbohydrate Metabolism, and Yield of Phytochrome-B-Overexpressing Potatoes under Different Light Regimes

Siegfried Schittenhelm*, Ute Menge-Hartmann and Elisabeth Oldenburg

Inst. of Crop and Grassland Sci., Federal Agric. Res. Centre (FAL), Bundesallee 50, 38116 Braunschweig, Germany

* Corresponding author (siegfried.schittenhelm{at}fal.de).

Transgenic potatoes (Solanum tuberosum L.) overexpressing Arabidopsis thaliana (L.) Heynh. phytochrome B (phyB) have been reported to exhibit a substantially modified plant architecture, increased photosynthetic performance, reduced photoinhibition, delayed leaf senescence, and increased tuber yield. A greenhouse and a growth chamber experiment were conducted at Braunschweig, Germany, to elucidate the crop physiological basis for the yield differences between moderately phyB-overexpressing transgenic (Dara-5) and wild-type potato plants. In the greenhouse experiment, Dara-5 leaves showed a 23% greater leaf carbon exchange rate (CER) at light saturation, 32% greater leaf conductance, and 21% longer green leaf area duration (GLAD) than the wild-type plants. The transgenic plants partitioned a considerably greater portion of their biomass to stems and roots, but tuber and total biomass yield did not significantly differ among genotypes. The leaves and stems of the transgenic plants had lower starch and soluble sugar concentrations but consistently higher N concentration than those of the nontransgenic plants. Light response curves showed increasing CER superiority of Dara-5 leaves with increasing photosynthetic photon flux (PPF), suggesting higher productivity of the transgenic plants in high-radiation environments. Therefore, the two genotypes were compared in growth chambers at low, medium, and high light levels of 300, 600, and 900 µmol m–2 s–1 PPF. Leaf CER of the transgenic plants reached 123, 115, and 120% of the wild-type plants at low, medium, and high PPF, but only at low PPF did the transgenic plants produce significantly greater (+8%) tuber yield than the nontransgenic plants. It is supposed that enhanced C loss from respiration is responsible for the lack of consistent transgenic yield superiority.

Abbreviations: CER, carbon exchange rate • CERmax, light-saturated carbon exchange rate • Chl, chlorophyll • DAE, days after emergence • GLA, green leaf area • GLAD, green leaf area duration • NIRS, near-infrared reflectance spectroscopy • PFR, far-red light absorbing form of phytochrome • phyB, phytochrome B • PPF, photosynthetic photon flux • RNA, ribonucleic acid • SLW, specific leaf weight • WSC, water soluble carbohydrates


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