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Featured researches published by Ashish K. Chaturvedi.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Molecular Assortment of Lens Species with Different Adaptations to Drought Conditions Using SSR Markers

Dharmendra Singh; Chandan Kumar Singh; Ram Sewak Singh Tomar; Jyoti Taunk; Ranjeet Singh; Sadhana Maurya; Ashish K. Chaturvedi; Madan Pal; Rajendra Singh; Sarawan Kumar Dubey

The success of drought tolerance breeding programs can be enhanced through molecular assortment of germplasm. This study was designed to characterize molecular diversity within and between Lens species with different adaptations to drought stress conditions using SSR markers. Drought stress was applied at seedling stage to study the effects on morpho-physiological traits under controlled condition, where tolerant cultivars and wilds showed 12.8–27.6% and 9.5–23.2% reduction in seed yield per plant respectively. When juxtaposed to field conditions, the tolerant cultivars (PDL-1 and PDL-2) and wild (ILWL-314 and ILWL-436) accessions showed 10.5–26.5% and 7.5%–15.6% reduction in seed yield per plant, respectively under rain-fed conditions. The reductions in seed yield in the two tolerant cultivars and wilds under severe drought condition were 48–49% and 30.5–45.3% respectively. A set of 258 alleles were identified among 278 genotypes using 35 SSR markers. Genetic diversity and polymorphism information contents varied between 0.321–0.854 and 0.299–0.836, with mean value of 0.682 and 0.643, respectively. All the genotypes were clustered into 11 groups based on SSR markers. Tolerant genotypes were grouped in cluster 6 while sensitive ones were mainly grouped into cluster 7. Wild accessions were separated from cultivars on the basis of both population structure and cluster analysis. Cluster analysis has further grouped the wild accessions on the basis of species and sub-species into 5 clusters. Physiological and morphological characters under drought stress were significantly (P = 0.05) different among microsatellite clusters. These findings suggest that drought adaptation is variable among wild and cultivated genotypes. Also, genotypes from contrasting clusters can be selected for hybridization which could help in evolution of better segregants for improving drought tolerance in lentil.


BMC Genomics | 2017

Transcriptome analysis of lentil (Lens culinaris Medikus) in response to seedling drought stress

Dharmendra Singh; Chandan Kumar Singh; Jyoti Taunk; Ram Sewak Singh Tomar; Ashish K. Chaturvedi; Kishor Gaikwad; Madan Pal

BackgroundDrought stress is one of the most harmful abiotic stresses in crop plants. As a moderately drought tolerant crop, lentil is a major crop in rainfed areas and a suitable candidate for drought stress tolerance research work. Screening for drought tolerance stress under hydroponic conditions at seedling stage with air exposure is an efficient technique to select genotypes with contrasting traits. Transcriptome analysis provides valuable resources, especially for lentil, as here the information on complete genome sequence is not available. Hence, the present studies were carried out.ResultsThis study was undertaken to understand the biochemical mechanisms and transcriptome changes involved in imparting adaptation to drought stress at seedling stage in drought-tolerant (PDL-2) and drought-sensitive (JL-3) cultivars. Among different physiological and biochemical parameters, a significant increase was recorded in proline, glycine betaine contents and activities of SOD, APX and GPX in PDL-2 compared to JL-3while chlorophyll, RWC and catalase activity decreased significantly in JL-3. Transcriptome changes between the PDL-2 and JL-3 under drought stress were evaluated using Illumina HiSeq 2500 platform. Total number of bases ranged from 5.1 to 6.7 Gb. Sequence analysis of control and drought treated cDNA libraries of PDL-2 and JL-3 produced 74032, 75500, 78328 and 81523 contigs, respectively with respective N50 value of 2011, 2008, 2000 and 1991. Differential gene expression of drought treated genotypes along with their controls revealed a total of 11,435 upregulated and 6,934 downregulated transcripts. For functional classification of DEGs, KEGG pathway annotation analysis extracted a total of 413 GO annotation terms where 176 were within molecular process, 128 in cellular and 109 in biological process groups.ConclusionThe transcriptional profiles provide a foundation for deciphering the underlying mechanism for drought tolerance in lentil. Transcriptional regulation, signal transduction and secondary metabolism in two genotypes revealed significant differences at seedling stage under severe drought. Our finding suggests role of candidate genes for improving drought tolerance in lentil.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Molecular Scanning and Morpho-Physiological Dissection of Component Mechanism in Lens Species in Response to Aluminium Stress

Dharmendra Singh; Madan Pal; Chandan Singh; Jyoti Taunk; Priyanka Jain; Ashish K. Chaturvedi; Sadhana Maurya; Sourabh Karwa; Rajendra Singh; Ram Sewak Singh Tomar; Rita Nongthombam; Nandini Chongtham; Moirangthem Premjit Singh

Aluminium (Al) stress was imposed on 285 lentil genotypes at seedling stage under hydroponics to study its effects on morpho-physiological traits where resistant cultigens and wilds showed minimum reduction in root and shoot length and maximum root re-growth (RRG) after staining. Molecular assortment based on 46 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers clustered the genotypes into 11 groups, where wilds were separated from the cultigens. Genetic diversity and polymorphism information content (PIC) varied between 0.148–0.775 and 0.140–0.739, respectively. Breeding lines which were found to be most resistant (L-7903, L-4602); sensitive cultivars (BM-4, L-4147) and wilds ILWL-185 (resistant), ILWL-436 (sensitive) were grouped into different clusters. These genotypes were also separated on the basis of population structure and Jaccard’s similarity index and analysed to study Al resistance mechanism through determination of different attributes like localization of Al and callose, lipid peroxidation, secretion of organic acids and production of antioxidant enzymes. In contrast to sensitive genotypes, in resistant ones most of the Al was localized in the epidermal cells, where its movement to apoplastic region was restricted due to release of citrate and malate. Under acidic field conditions, resistant genotypes produced maximum seed yield/plant as compared to sensitive genotypes at two different locations i.e. Imphal, Manipur, India and Basar, Arunanchal Pradesh, India during 2012–13, 2013–14 and 2014–15. These findings suggest that Al stress adaptation in lentil is through exclusion mechanism and hybridization between the contrasting genotypes from distinct clusters can help in development of resistant varieties.


Indian journal of plant physiology | 2016

Physiological traits for improving high temperature stress tolerance in rice

Rajeev Nayan Bahuguna; Ashish K. Chaturvedi; Madan Pal

High temperature stress is projected to be one of the major stresses of limiting rice productivity worldwide in future climate change scenario. This review explicates the key physiological traits for tailoring high temperature tolerance in rice. These physiological traits can be used to explore the genetic variability among rice germplasm and to develop the improved genotypes through breeding programs. Traits influenced under high day and night temperature are highlighted for understanding differential temporal and phenological regulation. Application of plant hormones and inorganic elicitor molecules to induce short term acclimation response have been shown to be useful for mitigating high temperature stress effects specifically when applied at critical growth stge.


Indian journal of plant physiology | 2017

Phenological sensitivity to high temperature stress determines dry matter partitioning and yield in potato

Ahmad Aien; Ashish K. Chaturvedi; Rajeev Nayan Bahuguna; Madan Pal

Effect of high temperature stress through different dates of planting and growing inside temperature tunnel were investigated in two contrasting potato cultivars Kufri Surya and Kufri Chipsona-3. High temperature exposure at early, late and tunnel environment delayed tuber initiation and shortened the bulking duration of both the potato cultivars. High temperature significantly decreased crop growth rate, tuber growth rate and net assimilation rate. Under high temperature, K. Chipsona-3 and K. Surya recorded 26–71% and 16–40% reduction in marketable yield. Yield attributes such as number of tubers, mean tuber weight and dry matter of tubers were significantly reduced in K. Chipsona-3. Moreover, higher phenological sensitivity of K. Chipsona-3 under high temperature stress resulted in reduced dry matter partitioning towards tuber. Our results demonstrated that phenological shift under high temperature stress is critical during tuber initiation that decides number of tubers and marketable yield in potato. Temperature inside poly-house tunnel was most detrimental for tuber initiation as well as bulking stage. Thus, precautions should to be taken to explain yield losses under growth chamber or tunnel conditions, which do not represent natural field conditions. Among two potato cultivars, K. Surya showed higher temperature tolerance as compared to K. Chipsona-3 under all high temperature environments. This could be attributed to higher assimilate partitioning efficiency of K. Surya towards tuber during bulking phase.


Field Crops Research | 2017

Elevated CO2 and heat stress interactions affect grain yield, quality and mineral nutrient composition in rice under field conditions

Ashish K. Chaturvedi; Rajeev N. Bahuguna; Madan Pal; Divya Shah; Sadhana Maurya; Krishna S.V. Jagadish


Acta Physiologiae Plantarum | 2015

Physiological and biochemical characteristics of Vigna species for Al stress tolerance

Dharmendra Singh; Madan Pal; Rajendra Singh; Chandan Kumar Singh; Ashish K. Chaturvedi


Plant Breeding | 2016

Exploring genetic diversity for heat tolerance among lentil (Lens culinaris Medik.) genotypes of variant habitats by simple sequence repeat markers

Dharmendra Singh; Chandan Kumar Singh; Ram Sevak S. Tomar; Ashish K. Chaturvedi; Divya Shah; Arun Kumar; Madan Pal


Acta Physiologiae Plantarum | 2014

Rising atmospheric CO2 may affect oil quality and seed yield of sunflower (Helianthus annus L.)

Madan Pal; Ashish K. Chaturvedi; Sunil Kumar Pandey; Rajiv N. Bahuguna; Sangeeta Khetarpal; Anjali Anand


Scientific Reports | 2017

High temperature stress during flowering and grain filling offsets beneficial impact of elevated CO 2 on assimilate partitioning and sink-strength in rice

Ashish K. Chaturvedi; Rajeev N. Bahuguna; Divya Shah; Madan Pal; S.V. Krishna Jagadish

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Madan Pal

Indian Agricultural Research Institute

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Divya Shah

Indian Agricultural Research Institute

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Chandan Kumar Singh

Indian Agricultural Research Institute

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Dharmendra Singh

Indian Agricultural Research Institute

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Jyoti Taunk

Indian Agricultural Research Institute

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Puja Rai

Indian Agricultural Research Institute

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Rajeev Nayan Bahuguna

Indian Agricultural Research Institute

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Rajendra Singh

Indian Agricultural Research Institute

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Ram Sewak Singh Tomar

Indian Council of Agricultural Research

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Sadhana Maurya

Indian Agricultural Research Institute

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