Mild Drought Promotes Biomass Accumulation and Increases Diosgenin Content in Rhizomes of Dioscorea nipponica
Ran Wang, Zhigang Xue, Zixing Li, Huan Cao, Jiayu Wang, Runze He, Haoyuan Gao, Runmei Gao

TL;DR
Mild drought increases diosgenin content in the rhizomes of Dioscorea nipponica, a medicinal plant, while also promoting biomass accumulation.
Contribution
The study identifies mild drought as a key environmental factor enhancing diosgenin accumulation and plant adaptation strategies.
Findings
Mild drought increased diosgenin content in rhizomes by 103.19 ± 2.63% compared to control conditions.
Severe drought reduced plant growth but increased rhizome proliferation rate by 83.33%.
Soil nitrogen was found to be important for the growth of D. nipponica.
Abstract
Dioscorea nipponica is an important medicinal and edible plant in northern China, and its extract dioscin is an important raw material for the modern pharmaceutical industry. To investigate the key environmental factors influencing diosgenin accumulation in the rhizomes of D. nipponica and their action mechanism, we collected wild D. nipponica plants from 60 plots on Zhongtiao Mountain and analyzed the effects of environmental conditions on both plant growth and diosgenin synthesis. Additionally, physiological parameters of D. nipponica were investigated under different intervals of watering treatments: control (CK, 3 days), mild drought (MID, 5 days), moderate drought (MD, 8 days) and severe drought (SD, 10 days). The results showed that the water content of rhizome was the main factor affecting the diosgenin content, and soil nutrients, especially nitrogen, played an important role in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhytochemical Studies and Bioactivities · Plant responses to water stress · Plant Stress Responses and Tolerance
