Litcius/Paper detail

Unravelling root system architecture plasticity in response to abiotic stresses in maize

Garudapalya Muniswamy Keerthi, Mallana Gowdra Mallikarjuna, Shilendra Kumar Jha, Rakesh Pandey, Palanisamy Veeraya, H. C. Lohithaswa, Viswanathan Chinnusamy

2025Scientific Reports13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Maize (Zea mays L.) production is often limited by edaphic stresses, viz., drought, salinity and nutrient deficiencies. The root system architecture (RSA) in is essential for efficient water and nutrient acquisition and overall plant stability under adverse conditions. Thus, identifying maize genotypes with desirable root characteristics under stress is a valuable strategy for breeding maize with enhanced abiotic stress tolerance and improved resource-use efficiency. The hydroponics-based root phenotyping offers control over the root environment, reduced labour, and almost damage-free phenotyping over field-based phenotyping. Here, we have investigated the adaptive RSA plasticity of maize under drought, low nitrogen, salinity, and non-stress environments. The results revealed significant variability for all the RSA-associated and related traits. The salinity-stressed genotypes showed adaptive plasticity with enhanced average root diameter (AD), whereas the enhanced total root length (TRL) and surface area (SA) were reduced along with average root diameter under low-N stress. The RSA traits TRL (total root length), SA (surface area), RV (root volume), SFW (shoot fresh weight), SDW (shoot dry weight), RFW (root fresh weight) and RDW (root dry weight) showed positive and significant correlations across the stress conditions (0.47 to 0.99; p < 0.001 to 0.05). Conversely, AD showed significantly negative correlations with SRL (-0.70 to -0.95; p < 0.001) of genotypes, stress (environment) and genotypes × stress (environment) interactions suggested the possibility of developing stress-specific maize cultivars by selecting inbred lines with high adaptive plasticity to specific stress environments or broad adaptability by selecting lines with high stability across stress environments. The results suggested that the maize RSA adapts not only specific root types and traits to cope with various environmental stress conditions but also the strength and directions of trait association. Notably, inbreds SKV671 and CML597 exhibited superior performance for various RSA traits under drought and low nitrogen conditions, while PML93 and MG42 excelled in salinity stress.

Topics & Concepts

PlasticityAbiotic componentAbiotic stressRoot (linguistics)BiologyComputer scienceEcologyMaterials scienceGeneticsGeneComposite materialLinguisticsPhilosophyPlant nutrient uptake and metabolismCrop Yield and Soil FertilityRice Cultivation and Yield Improvement