The subject of this paper, sun leaves are thicker and show higher photosynthetic rates than the shade leaves, is approached in two ways. The first seeks to answer the question: why are sun leaves thicker than shade leaves? To do this, CO2 diffusion within a leaf is examined first. Because affinity of Rubisco for CO2 is low, the carboxylation of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate is competitively inhibited by O2, and the oxygenation of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate leads to energy-consuming photorespiration, it is essential for C3 plants to maintain the CO2 concentration in the chloroplast as high as possible. Since the internal conductance for CO2 diffusion from the intercellular space to the chloroplast stroma is finite and relatively small, C3 leaves should have sufficient mesophyll surfaces occupied by chloroplasts to secure the area for CO2 dissolution and transport. This explains why sun leaves are thicker. The second approach is mechanistic or 'how-oriented'. Mechanisms are discussed as to how sun leaves become thicker than shade leaves, in particular, the long-distance signal transduction from mature leaves to leaf primordia inducing the periclinal division of the palisade tissue cells. To increase the mesophyll surface area, the leaf can either be thicker or have smaller cells. Issues of cell size are discussed to understand plasticity in leaf thickness.
Polyploidy affects photosynthesis by causing changes in morphology, anatomy and biochemistry. However, in newly developed polyploids, the genome may be unstable. In this study, diploid (2×) and synthetic autotetraploids in initial (4×-C0) and 11th generations (4×-C11) of Phlox drummondii Hook were used to study the effects of chromosome doubling and genome stabilisation on leaf photosynthesis and anatomical properties. The light-saturated photosynthetic rate on a leaf area basis at 360 µmol CO2 mol–1 air (A360) was highest in 4×-C11 leaves, intermediate in 4×-C0 leaves, and lowest in 2× leaves. Rubisco amounts, CO2-saturated photosynthetic rate at 1200 µmol CO2 mol–1 air at PPFD of 1000 µmol m–2 s–1 (A1200, representing the capacity for RuBP regeneration), cumulative surface areas of chloroplasts facing intercellular spaces (Sc), all expressed on a leaf area basis, were all higher in 4× leaves than in 2× leaves, and stomatal conductance (gs) at 360 µmol CO2 mol–1 air was only higher in the 4×-C11 leaves. A360 for the 4×-C11 leaves was greater than that in the 4×-C0 leaves despite having similar amounts of Rubisco. This was presumably associated with a greater RuBP regeneration capacity, as well as an increase in Sc and gs, which would increase the CO2 concentration of Rubisco. These results indicate that the higher rate of photosynthesis in 4×-C11 leaves was not an immediate outcome of chromosome doubling; rather, it was due to adjustment and adaptation during the process of genome stabilisation.
Two new cytoplasmic male‐sterile (CMS) lines have been developed in Brassica juncea using the bridgecross hybrids (Diplotaxis erucoides×Brassica campestris)×B. juncea and (Diplotaxis berthautii×B. campestris)×B. juncea. These were backcrossed ×ve times with pollen of B. juncea. The CMS line (D. erucoides) B. juncea segregated into tall and short true breeding types; both resembled the cultivar B. juncea in vegetative and floral morphology and in cytology, except for a greater number of secondary branches and smaller anthers with empty sterile pollen in the CMS line. Female fertility was as good in the CMS line as in the cultivar. The other CMS line (D. berthautii) B. juncea resembled the cultivar in vegetative morphology and cytology. Four true breeding floral types were isolated as follows: (1) smaller and indehiscent anthers containing empty, sterile pollen, (2) all six stamens petaloid, (3) one petaloid stamen and five stamens antherless, and (4) apetalous flowers with all six stamens antherless.
Intergeneric hybrids were produced between D. erucoides (♀), a wild species, and four cultivated species of Brassica, B. campestris, B. juncea, B. napus and B. oleracea, through embryo rescue. The hybrid nature of these plants was confirmed through morphological and cytological studies. Backcross pollinations with the pollen of the respective cultivars yielded BC progenies in the hybrids D. erucoides x B. juncea and D. erucoides x B. napus but not in D. erucoides x B. campestris and D. erucoides x B. oleracea. The hybrid D. erucoides x B. campestris was also used as a bridge species and crossed with B. juncea to raise the hybrid and backcross progenies. F2 progenies were more amenable than f1 hybrids for raising backcross progenies. Although D. erucoides is considered to be a close relative of B. campestris and B. oleracea, incompatibility barriers of this species with different cultivars do not reflect this relationship.
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