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This study focuses on the role of the qualitative leaf wax composition in modulating the cuticular water loss using a Populus × canescens cer6 mutant line, which accumulates C34-C46 wax ester dimers and is reduced in wax monomers >C24. The two literature-based hypotheses to be tested were the importance of the amount of wax esters and the weighted mean carbon chain length in restricting cuticular water loss. The main results were acquired by chemical analysis of cuticular wax and gravimetric cuticular transpiration measurements. Besides additional physiological measurements, the leaf surface properties were characterised by scanning electron microscopy and spectrophotometric light reflectance quantification. Mutation of the CER6 gene resulted in striking changes in qualitative wax composition but not quantitative wax amount. Based on the strong accumulation of dimeric wax esters, the relative proportion of esters increased to >90%, and the weighted mean carbon chain length increased by >6 carbon atoms. These qualitative alterations were found to increase the cuticular transpiration of leaves by twofold. Our results do not support the hypotheses that enhanced amounts of wax esters or increased weighted mean carbon chain lengths of waxes lead to reduced cuticular transpiration.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/pce.14719 | DOI Listing |
Tree Physiol
May 2025
Department of Wood Science, University of British Columbia, Faculty of Forestry, 2424 Main Mall, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z4, Canada.
Drought and episodic drought events are major impending impacts of climate change, limiting the productivity of plants and especially trees due to their inherent high transpiration rates. One common mechanism used by plants to cope with drought stress is to change the composition of their leaf cuticular waxes. Cuticular waxes are essential for controlling non-stomatal water loss and are typically composed of a homologous series of very-long-chain fatty acid-derived compounds, as well as flavonoids, tocopherols, triterpenoids, and phytosterols.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Physiol
September 2025
Institute of Cellular and Molecular Botany (IZMB), University of Bonn, Kirschallee 1, 53115 Bonn, Germany.
The rate of residual water loss is a major determinant of plant survival during drought, yet how the major paths of residual water flow develop as leaves expand is poorly understood. Here, we tracked the rate of residual water loss, the compositional development of cuticular wax, stomatal differentiation, pore formation, and xylem development as leaves expand in two co-occurring, deciduous tree species Tilia americana and Fagus grandifolia. As leaves expanded, residual conductance declined rapidly, primarily driven by decreases in cuticular conductance, which was the main pathway for residual water loss from branches with young leaves.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNew Phytol
May 2025
Department of Botany, University of Innsbruck, Sternwartestraße 15, Innsbruck, 6020, Austria.
Cuticle function can be pivotal to plant success in different environments. Yet, the occurrence of intraspecific adjustments in cuticle traits resulting from acclimation or adaptation to different habitats remains poorly understood. Here, we used genetically well-characterised populations of Arabidopsis arenosa to investigate whether cuticle traits were adjusted as part of the parallel evolution from a foothill to an alpine ecotype.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNew Phytol
May 2025
INRAE, UMR BIOGECO, Université de Bordeaux, Pessac, 33615, France.
Leaf water loss after stomatal closure is key to understanding the effects of prolonged drought on vegetation. It is therefore important to accurately quantify such water losses to improve physiology-based models of drought-induced plant mortality. We measured water loss of detached leaves continuously during dehydration in nine woody angiosperm species.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Cell Environ
June 2025
Department of Environmental Sciences - Botany, University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland.
The survival time of trees under drought is intimately linked to leaf minimum water conductance on the leaf surface (g), which determines the residual water loss of trees after maximum stomatal closure. Considerable interspecies variation of g in trees has been documented, but intraspecific variation resulting from genetic variation (G) and phenotypic plasticity (E) remains unclear. We measured the temperature response (T) of g in different provenances of four temperate tree species growing in three common gardens differing in water availability and assessed G, E and G × E of g and T.
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