Transcriptomic and physiological responses of soybean plants subjected to a combination of water deficit and heat stress under field conditions

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Abstract

Water deficit, heat stress, and a combination of water deficit and heat stress are highly disruptive to crop yield worldwide. Unfortunately, the frequency and intensity of these conditions is gradually increasing due to climate change. Previous studies of water deficit and heat stress combination were primarily conducted under controlled growth conditions, revealing that the combination of water deficit and heat stress resulted in the activation of unique stress responses and acclimation pathways. However, whether similar responses to stress combination occur in the field remained largely unknown. Here we report on a two-year field study in which the transcriptomic and physiological responses of vegetative and reproductive tissues of soybean (Glycine max) to water deficit, heat treatment and their combination were studied. Our findings reveal that the transcriptomic responses of soybeans grown in the field are different from those grown under controlled growth chamber conditions. These differences were especially noticeable in plants subjected to the heat or water deficit treatments, and less in plants subjected to the stress combination. In addition, we report that differential transpiration between leaves and pods, that was originally discovered in plants grown under controlled growth conditions, occurs in field grown soybeans in response to heat stress, as well as heat stress combined with water deficit. We hope that the transcriptomic datasets generated by our study will contribute to future studies of crop responses to different stresses in the field, as well as highlight the need for more omics studies of plants grown under field conditions.

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