The role of crassulacean acid metabolism induction in plant adaptation to water deficit

2016 ◽  
pp. 12-23 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ghader Habibi
2011 ◽  
Vol 38 (7) ◽  
pp. 576 ◽  
Author(s):  
Klaus Winter ◽  
Joseph A. M. Holtum

Calandrinia polyandra Benth. (Montiaceae), an annual succulent herb endemic to Australia, is an exemplary facultative crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) plant as demonstrated by continuous whole-plant lifetime CO2 exchange measurements under controlled conditions in the laboratory. Reduced soil water availability induced a shift from solely daytime CO2 fixation to dark CO2 fixation. The shift from C3 photosynthesis to CAM was reversible either upon rewatering alone, or upon a combination of rewatering and addition of nutrients. These observations highlight the role of edaphic conditions in controlling CAM expression in a plant that has the option of fixing CO2 either during the day or during the night, providing further evidence that this extreme form of photosynthetic plasticity is primarily controlled by the environment rather than plant ontogeny. The stimulating effect of soil nutrients on CO2 fixation in the light and its negative effect on dark CO2 fixation have not been described previously and deserve further attention. In the most widely used CAM model system, the halophytic Mesembryanthemum crystallinum L., CAM is typically induced by high salinity, and some metabolic responses may be CAM-unrelated and related to salt stress per se. C. polyandra could be an excellent complementary system for studying the biochemical and molecular foundations of CAM because drought stress elicits a complete C3 to CAM transition.


1998 ◽  
Vol 76 (11) ◽  
pp. 1908-1915 ◽  
Author(s):  
María Angélica Taisma ◽  
Ana Herrera

In plants of the perennial, deciduous herb Talinum triangulare, crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) is induced by drought; therefore, CAM may be an adaptation to water deficit in this species. The present study was undertaken to determine the effects of water deficit on fecundity and CAM in plants of T. triangulare. Plants were grown from seed in the greenhouse and the life table was constructed with dynamic cohorts. CAM was induced by drought in plants as young as 45 days old, and its induction was associated with a significant rise in fecundity; values of survival beta mean fecundity by age-class were 30-50% higher in plants subjected to drought than in control plants due to a rise in fecundity. Plants subjected to drought produced more and lighter seeds, which germinated faster than their watered controls. These characteristics could be advantageous for a colonizing species such as T. triangulare. Plants obtained from the germination of seeds of plants subjected to drought did not show higher values of nocturnal acid accumulation when subjected to drought than the droughted offspring of watered plants but they showed higher survival and an earlier and higher reproductive effort than plants obtained from the germination of seeds of watered plants. The fact that values of survival beta mean fecundity were higher in plants subjected to drought than in watered plants suggests, within the context of the life history, that characters associated with the CAM syndrome may be adaptive.Key words: fitness, inducible CAM, life table.


2020 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Li-Yu Chen ◽  
Yinghui Xin ◽  
Ching Man Wai ◽  
Juan Liu ◽  
Ray Ming

AbstractCrassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) photosynthesis is an innovation of carbon concentrating mechanism that is characterized by nocturnal CO2 fixation. Recent progresses in genomics, transcriptomics, proteomics, and metabolomics of CAM species yielded new knowledge and abundant genomic resources. In this review, we will discuss the pattern of cis-elements in stomata movement-related genes and CAM CO2 fixation genes, and analyze the expression dynamic of CAM related genes in green leaf tissues. We propose that CAM photosynthesis evolved through the re-organization of existing enzymes and associated membrane transporters in central metabolism and stomatal movement-related genes, at least in part by selection of existing circadian clock cis-regulatory elements in their promoter regions. Better understanding of CAM evolution will help us to design crops that can thrive in arid or semi-arid regions, which are likely to expand due to global climate change.


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