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Acta Prataculturae Sinica ›› 2023, Vol. 32 ›› Issue (8): 129-140.DOI: 10.11686/cyxb2022389

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Effect of alfalfa on the yield and sucrose metabolism of rice in an alfalfa-rice rotation system

Rui XU1(), Zheng WANG1, Yi-ming WANG2, Lian-tai SU1, Li GAO1, Peng ZHOU1, Yuan AN1()   

  1. 1.School of Agriculture and Biology,Shanghai Jiao Tong University,Key Laboratory of Urban Agriculture,Ministry of Agriculture,Shanghai 200240,China
    2.Shanghai Dingying Agriculture Limited Company,Shanghai 202171,China
  • Received:2022-10-05 Revised:2022-12-06 Online:2023-08-20 Published:2023-06-16
  • Contact: Yuan AN

Abstract:

The alfalfa-rice crop rotation system can improve soil quality, increase rice yield, and reduce nitrogen fertilizer input. The aim of this study was to investigate the physiological and molecular mechanisms underlying the effect of alfalfa to promote the yield of rice in this type of crop rotation. We conducted an experiment in which rice plants were grown with soil from a ryegrass crop (control 1), soil from an alfalfa crop (control 2), and soil and green manure from an alfalfa crop (alfalfa treatment). Compared with the two controls, the alfalfa treatment significantly increased the number of tillers, biomass, seed yield, and nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium contents in leaves of rice plants at the heading stage. The net photosynthetic rate of rice plants at the tillering stage, heading stage, and harvest stage was 16.99%, 27.22%, and 40.99% higher, respectively, in the alfalfa treatment than in control 1; and 16.88%, 37.99%, and 33.51% higher, respectively, in the alfalfa treatment than in control 2. The transcript levels of five key genes involved in sucrose metabolism (OsAGPS1, OsAGPL1, OsMEX1, OsSPS1, and OsSUS5) in the leaves (day and night) and roots differed significantly between the treatment and the controls. Compared with control 1, the alfalfa treatment resulted in up-regulation of OsAGPS1, OsAGPL1, OsMEX1, OsSPS1, and OsSUS5 (by factors of 2.45, 2.96, 1.29, 1.66, and 6.04, respectively) at night in leaves at the tillering stage, while only OsMEX1 and OsSPS1 were up-regulated in leaves during the daytime. OsMEX1 was significantly down-regulated during nighttime in leaves at the heading stage and harvesting stage in the alfalfa treatment. In roots, OsAGPL1OsMEX1, and OsAGPS1 were significantly up-regulated at the tillering or heading stage in the alfalfa treatment. Correspondingly, the activity of sucrose phosphate synthase and soluble starch synthase in leaves at tillering stage, as well as the contents of starch, sucrose, and soluble sugars in new leaves and leaf sheaths were significantly increased, while sucrose and soluble sugar contents in old leaves were significantly decreased in the alfalfa treatment compared with the two controls. These results indicate that alfalfa green manure and soil can change the distribution of starch, sucrose, and soluble sugars in leaves and sheaths of rice plants grown in a rotation system by affecting the contents of N, P, K in leaves and the circadian expression pattern of key genes in the sucrose metabolic pathway at the tillering stage, thereby increasing rice yield.

Key words: alfalfa, rice, nutrient elements, sucrose metabolism genes, starch