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Dive into the research topics where D. K. Biswas is active.

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Featured researches published by D. K. Biswas.


Functional Plant Biology | 2009

Photosynthetic responses to chromosome doubling in relation to leaf anatomy in Lonicera japonica subjected to water stress.

Wei-Dong Li; D. K. Biswas; Hong Xu; Chang-Qing Xu; X. Z. Wang; Jia-Kun Liu; Gaoming Jiang

Gas exchange, chlorophyll fluorescence, and contents of some metabolites in two Japanese honeysuckle (Lonicera japonica Thunb.) cultivars, Damaohua (2n = 2x) and Jiufengyihao (2n = 4x), were compared with explore the function of chromosome doubling under water stress conditions. Water stress significantly decreased net photosynthesis rate, stomatal conductance, and transpiration rate of both cultivars. It also decreased electron transport rate, effective quantum yield of Photosystem II, photochemical quenching, and starch content, but increased non-photochemical quenching and contents of total soluble sugars, proline, and malondialdehyde. However, the tetraploid cultivar showed higher resistance to water stress than the diploid, as indicated by the fact that gas exchange, chlorophyll fluorescence, and metabolites were less affected for the tetraploid than the diploid. Moreover, the tetraploid recovered more quickly than the diploid after re-watering. Morphological and anatomical analysis further revealed that the tetraploid possessed less whole plant leaf area, higher leaf mass per unit area, thicker epidermis (both upper and lower) and palisade tissue, as well as denser pubescence. All of those specialised structures caused by chromosome doubling might lead to greater capacity in coping with drought stress. Our findings suggest that the effect of chromosome doubling on drought resistance in L. japonica could attribute to the improvement of structure and photosynthesis-related traits.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2008

Assessing the genetic relatedness of higher ozone sensitivity of modern wheat to its wild and cultivated progenitors/relatives

D. K. Biswas; Hongqi Xu; Yonggeng Li; Meizhen Liu; Y. H. Chen; Juan Sun; Gaoming Jiang

Modern wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) is one of the most ozone (O(3))-sensitive crops. However, little is known about its genetic background of O(3) sensitivity, which is fundamental for breeding O(3)-resistant cultivars. Wild and cultivated species of winter wheat including donors of the A, B and D genomes of T. aestivum were exposed to 100 ppb O(3) or charcoal-filtered air in open top chambers for 21 d. Responses to O(3) were assessed by visible O(3) injury, gas exchange, chlorophyll fluorescence, relative growth rate, and biomass accumulation. Ozone significantly decreased light-saturated net photosynthetic rate (-37%) and instantaneous transpiration efficiency (-42%), but increased stomatal conductance (+11%) and intercellular CO(2) concentration (+11%). Elevated O(3) depressed ground fluorescence (-8%), maximum fluorescence (-26%), variable fluorescence (-31%), and maximum photochemical efficiency (-7%). Ozone also decreased relative growth rate and the allometric coefficient, which finally reduced total biomass accumulation (-54%), but to a greater extent in roots (-77%) than in the shoot (-44%). Winter wheat exhibited significant interspecies variation in the impacts of elevated O(3) on photosynthesis and growth. Primitive cultivated wheat demonstrated the highest relative O(3) tolerance followed by modern wheat and wild wheat showed the lowest. Among the genome donors of modern wheat, Aegilops tauschii (DD) behaved as the most O(3)-sensitive followed by T. monococcum (AA) and Triticum turgidum ssp. durum (AABB) appeared to be the most O(3)-tolerant. It was concluded that the higher O(3) sensitivity of modern wheat was attributed to the increased O(3) sensitivity of Aegilops tauschii (DD), but not to Triticum turgidum ssp. durum (AABB) during speciation.


Photosynthetica | 2007

Photosynthesis and yield responses of ozone-polluted winter wheat to drought

Hu-Shan Xu; D. K. Biswas; Wei Li; Shouyi Chen; Lisha Zhang; Gaoming Jiang; Yingfeng Li

Winter wheat (Triticum aestivum L. cv. Jingdong 8) was exposed to short-term high ozone treatment after anthesis and then was either well irrigated with soil water content (SWC) of 80–85 % (O3+W) or drought treated (SWC 35–40 %, O3+D). Short-term ozone exposure significantly decreased irradiance-saturated net photosynthetic rate (PN) of winter wheat. Under good SWC, PN of the O3-treated plant was similar to that of control on 2 d after O3-exposure (6 DAA), but decreased significantly after 13 DAA, indicating that O3 exposure accelerated leaf senescence. Meanwhile, green flag leaf area was reduced faster than that of control. As a result, grain yield of O3+W was significantly decreased. PN of O3+D was further notably decreased and green flag leaf area was reduced more than that in O3+W. Consequently, substantial yield loss of O3+D was observed compared to that of O3+W. Although PN was significantly positively correlated with stomatal conductance, it also had notable positive correlation with the maximum photochemical efficiency in the dark adapted leaves (Fv/Fm), electron transport rate (ETR), photochemical quenching (qP), as well as content of chlorophyll, suggesting that the depression of PN was mainly caused by non-stomatal limitation. Hence optimal soil water condition should be considered in order to reduce the yield loss caused by O3 pollution.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2011

Differential drought-induced modulation of ozone tolerance in winter wheat species.

D. K. Biswas; Gaoming Jiang

Recent reports challenge the widely accepted idea that drought may offer protection against ozone (O3) damage in plants. However, little is known about the impact of drought on the magnitude of O3 tolerance in winter wheat species. Two winter wheat species with contrasting sensitivity to O3 (O3 tolerant, primitive wheat, T. turgidum ssp. durum; O3 sensitive, modern wheat, T. aestivum L. cv. Xiaoyan 22) were exposed to O3 (83ppb O3, 7h d−1) and/or drought (42% soil water capacity) from flowering to grain maturity to assess drought-induced modulation of O3 tolerance. Plant responses to stress treatments were assessed by determining in vivo biochemical parameters, gas exchange, chlorophyll a fluorescence, and grain yield. The primitive wheat demonstrated higher O3 tolerance than the modern species, with the latter exhibiting higher drought tolerance than the former. This suggested that there was no cross-tolerance of the two stresses when applied separately in these species/cultivars of winter wheat. The primitive wheat lost O3 tolerance, while the modern species showed improved tolerance to O3 under combined drought and O3 exposure. This indicated the existence of differential behaviour of the two wheat species between a single stress and the combination of the two stresses. The observed O3 tolerance in the two wheat species was related to their magnitude of drought tolerance under a combination of drought and O3 exposure. The results clearly demonstrate that O3 tolerance of a drought-sensitive winter wheat species can be completely lost under combined drought and O3 exposure.


Photosynthetica | 2009

Photosynthetic and yield responses of an old and a modern winter wheat cultivars to short-term ozone exposure

Haihua Xu; Shunmei Chen; D. K. Biswas; Yonggeng Li; Gaoming Jiang

In order to study the responses of winter wheat cultivars released in different years to short-term high O3 exposure, an old cultivar (‘Nongda 311’, released in 1960s) and a modern one (‘Yannong 19’, released in 1990s) were treated with an O3 exposure (145 ± 12 mm3 m−3, 4 h d−1 for 3 d) shortly after anthesis stage (> 50 % main stems blossomed). During the O3 exposure, light-saturated photosynthetic rate (PN) and stomatal conductance (gs) of both cultivars decreased considerably. Elevated O3 did not decrease dark-adapted maximum photochemical efficiency, but induced significant reduction in actual photochemical efficiency and thereby considerably increase in non-photochemical quenching. PN, gs of the modern cultivar ‘Yannong 19’ decreased more than the older one ‘Nongda 311’, indicating the former exhibited higher sensitivity to O3 than the latter. After O3 exposure, PN, gs and chlorophyll (Chl) content in flag leaf decreased more quickly than control, indicating induction of faster premature leaf senescence. As a result, the short-term O3 exposure caused substantial yield loss, with larger reduction in ‘Yannong 19’ (−19.2 %) than in ‘Nongda 311’ (−8.4 %). Our results indicated that high O3 exposure at grain filling stage would have greater negative impacts on the high yielding modern cultivar relative to the old one with lower yield.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2013

Modification of photosynthesis and growth responses to elevated CO2 by ozone in two cultivars of winter wheat with different years of release

D. K. Biswas; Heng-Heng Xu; Yonggeng Li; B.L. Ma; Gaoming Jiang

The beneficial effects of elevated CO2 on plants are expected to be compromised by the negative effects posed by other global changes. However, little is known about ozone (O3)-induced modulation of elevated CO2 response in plants with differential sensitivity to O3. An old (Triticum aestivum cv. Beijing 6, O3 tolerant) and a modern (T. aestivum cv. Zhongmai 9, O3 sensitive) winter wheat cultivar were exposed to elevated CO2 (714 ppm) and/or O3 (72 ppb, for 7h d–1) in open-topped chambers for 21 d. Plant responses to treatments were assessed by visible leaf symptoms, simultaneous measurements of gas exchange and chlorophyll a fluorescence, in vivo biochemical properties, and growth. It was found that elevated CO2 resulted in higher growth stimulation in the modern cultivar attributed to a higher energy capture and electron transport rate compared with the old cultivar. Exposure to O3 caused a greater growth reduction in the modern cultivar due to higher O3 uptake and a greater loss of photosystem II efficiency (mature leaf) and mesophyll cell activity (young leaf) than in the old cultivar. Elevated CO2 completely protected both cultivars against the deleterious effects of O3 under elevated CO2 and O3. The modern cultivar showed a greater relative loss of elevated CO2-induced growth stimulation due to higher O3 uptake and greater O3-induced photoinhibition than the old cultivar at elevated CO2 and O3. Our findings suggest that the elevated CO2-induced growth stimulation in the modern cultivar attributed to higher energy capture and electron transport rate can be compromised by its higher O3 uptake and greater O3-induced photoinhibition under elevated CO2 and O3 exposure.


Photosynthetica | 2007

Photosynthetic response to water stress and changes in metabolites in Jasminum sambac

H. Cai; D. K. Biswas; A. Q. Shang; L. J. Zhao; Wei Li

Gas exchange, chlorophyll (Chl) fluorescence, and contents of some metabolites in two genotypes of jasmine (Jasminum sambac), single petal (SP) and double petal (DP) one, were analyzed during dehydration and re-hydration. Water stress significantly decreased net photosynthetic rate, stomatal conductance, and maximum photochemical efficiency (Fv/Fm) in both jasmine genotypes, but increased minimum fluorescence (F0) only in DP-jasmine. Water stress also decreased starch content, while increased contents of total soluble sugars and proline in leaves of both genotypes. SP-jasmine demonstrated higher drought tolerance as evidenced by maintaining higher gas exchange and photochemical efficiency and lower alteration of metabolites than DP-jasmine. Recovery analysis revealed that drought-induced injury in photosynthetic machinery in jasmine plants was reversible. DP-jasmine exhibited a slow recovery of drought-induced impairment in photosynthetic activity and associated metabolites, suggesting that this genotype had lower capacity to adapt to water limited condition. Higher yield stability of SP-than that of DP-jasmine under rain-fed condition finally confirmed higher drought tolerance of SP-jasmine.


Photosynthetica | 2006

Enhanced photosystem 2 thermostability during leaf growth of elm (Ulmus pumila) seedlings

Chunsun Jiang; Gaoming Jiang; X. Z. Wang; Lijun Li; D. K. Biswas; Yingfeng Li

We examined photosynthetic activities and thermostability of photosystem 2 (PS2) in leaves of elm (Ulmus pumila) seedlings from initiation to full expansion. During leaf development, net photosynthetic rate (PN) increased gradually and reached the maximum when leaves were fully developed. In parallel with the increase of PN, chlorophyll (Chl) content was significantly elevated. Chl a fluorescence measurements showed that the maximum quantum yield of PS2 (ϕPS2), the efficiency a trapped exciton, moved an electron into the electron transport chain further than QA− (Ψo), and the quantum yield of electron transport beyond QA (ϕEo) increased gradually. These results were independently confirmed by our low irradiance experiments. When subjected to progressive heat stress, the young leaves exhibited considerably lower ϕPS2 and higher minimal fluorescence (F0) than the mature leaves, revealing the highly sensitive nature of PS2 under heat in the newly initiating leaves. Further analysis showed that PS2 structure in the newly initiating leaves was strongly altered under heat, as evidenced by the increased fluorescence signals at the position of the K step. We therefore demonstrated an inhibition in the oxygen-evolving complex (OEC) in the young leaves. This resulted in decrease in amount of the functional PS2 reaction centres and relative increase in the PS2 reaction centres with inhibited electron transport at the acceptor side under heat. We suggest that the enhanced thermostability of PS2 during leaf development is associated with improved OEC stability.


Biologia Plantarum | 2006

The effect of elevated CO2 concentration on leaf chlorophyll and nitrogen contents in rice during post-flowering phases

M. Moynul Haque; Abdul Hamid; M. Khanam; D. K. Biswas; Mesbah Karim; Quazi Abdul Khaliq; Muhammad Azmol Hossain; D.C. Uprety

The effect of elevated CO2 concentration (CE) on leaf chlorophyll (Chl) and nitrogen (N) contents and photosynthetic rate (PN) was evaluated during the post-flowering stages of rice grown at CE (570 ± 50 µmol mol−1) in open top chamber (OTC), at ambient CO2 concentration (∼ 365 µmol mol−1) in OTC and at open field. Thirty-five day old seedlings were transplanted in OTCs or in field and allowed to grow till maturity. Chl and N contents were highest at the time of flowering and thereafter it started to decline. The rate of decline in Chl and N contents was faster in plants grown under CE mostly in later part of growth. Irrespective of treatment difference, flag leaf contained the highest amount of Chl and N than penultimate and third leaf. The higher PN was observed in leaves under CE than in the leaves in other two growing conditions. Considering growth stage, PN was the highest at flowering which reduced at the later part of growth due to degradation of Chl and N content of the leaf. Under CE it was 40.02 µmol m−2 s−1 at flowering and it reduced to only 14.77 µmol m−2 s−1 at maturity stage. The beneficial effect of CE in increasing leaf PN may be maintained by applying extra dose of nitrogen at the later stages of plant growth.


Global Change Biology | 2007

Genotypic differences in leaf biochemical, physiological and growth responses to ozone in 20 winter wheat cultivars released over the past 60 years

D. K. Biswas; Hongxing Xu; Yonggeng Li; Jing Sun; X. Z. Wang; Xingguo Han; Gaoming Jiang

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Gaoming Jiang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Yonggeng Li

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Meizhen Liu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Chunsun Jiang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Hong Xu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Shouyi Chen

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Shuli Niu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Wei Li

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Yingfeng Li

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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