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1.
Abiotic environmental stresses can give rise to morphological, biochemical and molecular changes that negatively affect plant growth and productivity. Among these stresses, soil salinity is the major threat. To deal and control effects of high salinity on plants, it is important to understand their responses to salt stress that disturbs the homeostatic equilibrium at cellular and molecular levels. In this regard halophytes (salt tolerant plants) can provide superior models for the study of salt stress defense parameters compared to salt sensitive species (glycophytes). Halophytes use highly developed, complex systems to tolerate salinity by maintaining a low cytosolic Na+/K+ ratio, sequestration of Na+ into vacuoles that then provides the osmotic potential sustaining water influx. Under low intensity stress conditions that moderately and/or transiently affect ion imbalance, the set of responses all plants initiate will be mostly to engage measures that assure ion balance. High salinity, especially over a prolonged time period, will challenge plant survival, which then requires different strategies that employ a variety of mechanisms. Plasticity and connectivity of these diverse mechanisms is engrained in species- and family-specific evolutionary history and their genetic complexity. Highlighting differences in the genetic and biochemical makeup between glycophytes and halophytes allows for comparisons between their approaches towards high salinity. This review provides a brief overview about different strategies and mechanism used by plants to avoid or confine adverse effects of high salinity.  相似文献   

2.
Abstract Salt-tolerant grasses and a sedge were grown at three salinities in a controlled-environment greenhouse. They were measured for growth rate, ash content, water content and cations. Fourteen species from the genera Sporobolus, Aeluropus, Leptochloa, Paspalum, Puccinellia, Hordeum, Elymus, Distichlis and Spartina survived up to the highest salt treatment (540 mol m?3 NaCl). These were designated halophytes. Eleven species from the genera Triticum, Phragmites, Dactylotenium, Cynodon, Polypogon, Panicum, Jovea and Heleocharis only survived up to 180 mol m?3 NaCl and were designated salt-tolerant glycophytes. All species except Distichlis palmeri grew fastest on the non-saline control treatment. All species tended to have higher Na+ contents and lower K+ and water contents on saline treatments compared to control plants. Halophytes differed from glycophytes in having statistically significant lower water contents on the non-saline treatment, and lower ash contents and Na:K ratios on 180 mol m?3. However, the range of values among species was greater than the differences between halophytes and glycophytes. All species appeared to use Na+ accumulation and loss of water as the main means of osmotic adjustment. Three halophytic species were grown for a longer period of time to check the above results. The osmolality of the cell sap was measured directly by the vapour pressure method and compared to calculated values based on Na+, K+ and water contents (and assuming a balancing anion such as Cl?). Na+ and K+ alone could account for greater than 75% of the osmotic potential at all salinities. Hence, the accumulation of organic solutes did not appear to be an important factor in the osmotic adjustment of these species. The results support the conclusion that grasses coordinate Na+ uptake and water loss to maintain a constant osmotic potential gradient between the shoot tissues and the external solution. The results were compared to a previous study with dicotyledonous halophytes at the same location.  相似文献   

3.
Agricultural production of halophytes irrigated with seawater   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Summary Growing agricultural crops with direct seawater irrigation has progressed within the past few years from the conceptual to the experimental phase. This has been accomplished by selecting halophytes with inherently high salinity tolerance for use as crop plants rather than by increasing the ability of traditional crop plants to tolerate seawater. Some of the halophytes being investigated for use as crops in seawater irrigation scenarios have high nutritional value as forage or fodder crops. Most of them also have high digestibility. The limiting factor in such use is their high salt content, but this limitation can be moderated. However, since seeds of halophytes do not accumulate salt any more than do those of glycophytes, the greatest promise for seawater-irrigated halophytes probably will be as seed crops. The seeds of many halophytes have high protein and oil contents and compare favorably with traditional oilseed crops. Sustained high yields of seed and biomass already have been obtained from some halophytes irrigated with seawater, and within the next few years seawater agriculture should proceed from the experimental to the operational phase.  相似文献   

4.
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6.
The legume genus Lotus includes glycophytic forage crops and other species adapted to extreme environments, such as saline soils. Understanding salt tolerance mechanisms will contribute to the discovery of new traits which may enhance the breeding efforts towards improved performance of legumes in marginal agricultural environments. Here, we used a combination of ionomic and gas chromatography‐mass spectrometry (GC‐MS)‐based metabolite profilings of complete shoots (pooling leaves, petioles and stems) to compare the extremophile Lotus creticus, adapted to highly saline coastal regions, and two cultivated glycophytic grassland forage species, Lotus corniculatus and Lotus tenuis. L. creticus exhibited better survival after exposure to long‐term lethal salinity and was more efficient at excluding Cl from the shoots than the glycophytes. In contrast, Na+ levels were higher in the extremophile under both control and salt stress, a trait often observed in halophytes. Ionomics demonstrated a differential rearrangement of shoot nutrient levels in the extremophile upon salt exposure. Metabolite profiling showed that responses to NaCl in L. creticus shoots were globally similar to those of the glycophytes, providing little evidence for metabolic pre‐adaptation to salinity. This study is the first comparing salt acclimation responses between extremophile and non‐extremophile legumes, and challenges the generalization of the metabolic salt pre‐adaptation hypothesis.  相似文献   

7.
A putative vacuolar Na+/H+ antiporter gene (SsNHX1) was isolated from the halophyte Salsola soda using the rapid amplification of cDNA ends method. Highly conserved regions of plant vacuolar Na+/H+ antiporter, including amiloride-binding domain, NHE (Na+/H+ exchange) domain, and 12 transmembrane segments, were found in the deduced amino acid sequence of SsNHX1. Multiple alignments of vacuolar Na+/H+ antiporters showed that SsNHX1 shared high identity with other plant vacuolar Na+/H+ antiporters. Phylogenetic relationship analysis indicated that SsNHX1 was clustered into the vacuolar Na+/H+ antiporter group. Taken together, these results suggest that SsNHX1 is a new member of the vacuolar Na+/H+ antiporter family. The effective expression of SsNHX1 in alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.) enhanced the salt tolerance of transgenic alfalfa which could grow in high concentrations of NaCl (up to 400 mM) over 50 days. This was the highest level of salt tolerance reported in transgenic plants. A further analysis of the physiological characteristics of transgenic and wild-type plants, including the Na+ and K+ contents, superoxide dismutase activity, the rate of electrolyte leakage, and the proline content, showed that large amounts of Na+ in the cytoplasm of leaves were transported into vacuoles by the exogenous Na+/H+ antiporter, which averted the toxic effects of Na+ to the cell of transgenic alfalfa.  相似文献   

8.
Yi L P  Ma J  Li Y 《农业工程》2007,27(9):3565-3571
North-West China is an arid region where halophyte plants are rich. Very little is known on the rhizospheric soil of the halophytes in this arid desert region. We conducted a rhizobag experiment on the desert Solonchak soil to investigate the salt and nutrient content in the rhizospheric soil of the desert halophytes. The total salt and the concentrations of 8 major kinds of salt ions increased in the rhizosphere of both succulent halophytes and salt secreting halophytes, but this increase was insignificant for salt-resisting halophytes. Accumulation of Cl and Na+ is the most significant among the 8 major kinds of salt ions. Accumulation of Cl was more significant than that of SO42– in succulent halophytes and salt secreting halophytes. The Na+/K+, Na+/Ca2+ and Na+/Mg2+ ratios in the rhizosphere of all 7 kinds of halophytes were higher than those in the bulk soil. Total N increased significantly in the rhizosphere, but total P and total K decreased. However, the available N, P and K in the rhizosphere of the 7 kinds of halophytes except Phragmites communis Trin. behaved in such an opposite way that available N decreased but available P and available K increased. The ionic contents in the aboveground parts were higher than those in the underground parts of the 7 kinds of halophytes, in particular of both the succulent halophytes and the salt secreting halophytes. Accumulation of Cl and Na+ in the aboveground parts of the plants was the most significant among that of the 8 major kinds of salt ions.  相似文献   

9.
Background Halophytes are the flora of saline soils. They adjust osmotically to soil salinity by accumulating ions and sequestering the vast majority of these (generally Na+ and Cl) in vacuoles, while in the cytoplasm organic solutes are accumulated to prevent adverse effects on metabolism. At high salinities, however, growth is inhibited. Possible causes are: toxicity to metabolism of Na+ and/or Cl in the cytoplasm; insufficient osmotic adjustment resulting in reduced net photosynthesis because of stomatal closure; reduced turgor for expansion growth; adverse cellular water relations if ions build up in the apoplast (cell walls) of leaves; diversion of energy needed to maintain solute homeostasis; sub-optimal levels of K+ (or other mineral nutrients) required for maintaining enzyme activities; possible damage from reactive oxygen species; or changes in hormonal concentrations.Scope This review discusses the evidence for Na+ and Cl toxicity and the concept of tissue tolerance in relation to halophytes.Conclusions The data reviewed here suggest that halophytes tolerate cytoplasmic Na+ and Cl concentrations of 100–200 mm, but whether these ions ever reach toxic concentrations that inhibit metabolism in the cytoplasm or cause death is unknown. Measurements of ion concentrations in the cytosol of various cell types for contrasting species and growth conditions are needed. Future work should also focus on the properties of the tonoplast that enable ion accumulation and prevent ion leakage, such as the special properties of ion transporters and of the lipids that determine membrane permeability.  相似文献   

10.
Halophytes can grow under a high salinity condition. Similar to glycophytes, their salt-tolerance possesses a high genetic complexity. There are many morphological and physiological studies on halophytes but very little information is at molecular level why they are salt-tolerant. Limonium sinense is a salt-secreting halophyte and can excretes salts by multi-cellular glands. Here, we report the library construction and sequence analysis of a cDNA library made from leaf tissue of L. sinenes. Among those 1082 expressed sequence tag (EST) obtained, 684 unique genes were identified: 429 showed homology to previously identified genes, 255 matched to uncharacterized genes. Compared with other EST databases, some characteristic features such as abundance genes in related to cytoskeleton and intracellular traffic, membrane transporting were observed, which may be specific to halophytes.  相似文献   

11.
Plant salt tolerance: adaptations in halophytes   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Background Most of the water on Earth is seawater, each kilogram of which contains about 35 g of salts, and yet most plants cannot grow in this solution; less than 0·2 % of species can develop and reproduce with repeated exposure to seawater. These ‘extremophiles’ are called halophytes.Scope Improved knowledge of halophytes is of importance to understanding our natural world and to enable the use of some of these fascinating plants in land re-vegetation, as forages for livestock, and to develop salt-tolerant crops. In this Preface to a Special Issue on halophytes and saline adaptations, the evolution of salt tolerance in halophytes, their life-history traits and progress in understanding the molecular, biochemical and physiological mechanisms contributing to salt tolerance are summarized. In particular, cellular processes that underpin the ability of halophytes to tolerate high tissue concentrations of Na+ and Cl, including regulation of membrane transport, their ability to synthesize compatible solutes and to deal with reactive oxygen species, are highlighted. Interacting stress factors in addition to salinity, such as heavy metals and flooding, are also topics gaining increased attention in the search to understand the biology of halophytes.Conclusions Halophytes will play increasingly important roles as models for understanding plant salt tolerance, as genetic resources contributing towards the goal of improvement of salt tolerance in some crops, for re-vegetation of saline lands, and as ‘niche crops’ in their own right for landscapes with saline soils.  相似文献   

12.
Plant vacuolar Na+/H+ antiporters play important roles in maintaining cellular ion homeostasis and mediating the transport of Na+ out of the cytosol and into the vacuole. Vacuolar antiporters have been shown to play significant roles in salt tolerance; however the relatively low Vmax of the Na+/H+ exchange of the Na+/H+ antiporters identified could limit its application in the molecular breeding of salt tolerant crops. In this study, we applied DNA shuffling methodology to generate and recombine the mutations of Arabidopsis thaliana vacuolar Na+/H+ antiporter gene AtNHX1. Screening using a large scale yeast complementation system identified AtNHXS1, a novel Na+/H+ antiporter. Expression of AtNHXS1 in yeast showed that the antiporter localized to the vacuolar membrane and that its expression improved the tolerance of yeast to NaCl, KCl, LiCl, and hygromycin B. Measurements of the ion transport activity across the intact yeast vacuole demonstrated that the AtNHXS1 protein showed higher Na+/H+ exchange activity and a slightly improved K+/H+ exchange activity.  相似文献   

13.
盐生植物种子萌发对环境的适应对策   总被引:45,自引:0,他引:45  
渠晓霞  黄振英 《生态学报》2005,25(9):2389-2398
盐生环境是一种严峻的胁迫环境,对植物的生长、发育、繁殖等生活史的各阶段都产生着重要的影响。盐生植物是生长在盐渍土壤上的一类天然植物区系,它们在长期的进化过程中形成了一系列适应盐生生境的特殊生存策略。一般情况下,盐生植物种子对环境的适应能力,是植物对盐生环境适应性的重要体现;而植物发育早期对盐度的适应能力又是决定物种分布和群落组成的关键因素。在对国内外相关文献进行分析归纳的基础上,从盐分对种子萌发的影响机理及植物种子萌发对盐生环境的适应对策两个方面综述了植物种子休眠萌发与盐生环境的关系。  相似文献   

14.
The electrophysiology of root cells of the marine halophyte, Salicornia bigelovii Torr., has been investigated. Cellular concentrations of K+, Cl, and Na+ and resulting cell membrane potentials were determined as functions of time and exposure to dilutions of artificial seawater. Treatment of these data by the Nernst criterion suggests that Cl is actively transported into these root cells, but that active transport need not be invoked to explain the accumulation of Na+ at all salinities investigated nor for K+ at moderate to high salinities. In low environmental salinity, the cell electropotential of Salicornia root cells was found to respond to inhibitors in a fashion similar to that observed in glycophytes; in high environmental salinity, root cell membrane potential appears to be insensitive to bathing salinity and m-chlorocarbonylcyanide phenylhydrazone induces membrane hyperpolarization, in contrast to the response of glycophytes to such treatments. The fact that measured membrane potentials exceed diffusion potentials for Na+, K+, and Cl and the observation of a rapid depolarization by CO in the dark suggests an electrogenic component in Salicornia root cell membrane potentials.  相似文献   

15.
The contents of Na+, K+, water, and dry matter were measured in leaves and roots of euhalophytes Salicornia europaea L. and Climacoptera lanata (Pall.) Botsch featuring succulent and xeromorphic cell structures, respectively, as well as in saltbush Atriplex micrantha C.A. Mey, a halophyte having bladder-like salt glands on their leaves. All three species were able to accumulate Na+ in their tissues. The Na+ content in organs increased with elevation of NaCl concentration in the substrate, the concentrations of Na+ being higher in leaves than in roots. When these halophytes were grown on a NaCl-free substrate, a trend toward K+ accumulation was observed and was better pronounced in leaves than in roots. Particularly high K+ concentrations were accumulated in Salicornia leaves. There were no principal differences in the partitioning of Na+ and K+ between organs of three halophyte species representing different ecological groups. At all substrate concentrations of NaCl, the total content of Na+ and K+ in leaves was higher than in roots. This distribution pattern persisted in Atriplex possessing salt glands, as well as in euhalophytes Salicornia and Climacoptera. The physiological significance of such universal pattern of ion accumulation and distribution among organs in halophytes is related to the necessity of water absorption by roots, its transport to shoots, and maintenance of sufficient cell water content in all organs under high soil salinity.  相似文献   

16.
Sergey Shabala 《Annals of botany》2013,112(7):1209-1221

Background

Global annual losses in agricultural production from salt-affected land are in excess of US$12 billion and rising. At the same time, a significant amount of arable land is becoming lost to urban sprawl, forcing agricultural production into marginal areas. Consequently, there is a need for a major breakthrough in crop breeding for salinity tolerance. Given the limited range of genetic diversity in this trait within traditional crops, stress tolerance genes and mechanisms must be identified in extremophiles and then introduced into traditional crops.

Scope and Conclusions

This review argues that learning from halophytes may be a promising way of achieving this goal. The paper is focused around two central questions: what are the key physiological mechanisms conferring salinity tolerance in halophytes that can be introduced into non-halophyte crop species to improve their performance under saline conditions and what specific genes need to be targeted to achieve this goal? The specific traits that are discussed and advocated include: manipulation of trichome shape, size and density to enable their use for external Na+ sequestration; increasing the efficiency of internal Na+ sequestration in vacuoles by the orchestrated regulation of tonoplast NHX exchangers and slow and fast vacuolar channels, combined with greater cytosolic K+ retention; controlling stomata aperture and optimizing water use efficiency by reducing stomatal density; and efficient control of xylem ion loading, enabling rapid shoot osmotic adjustment while preventing prolonged Na+ transport to the shoot.  相似文献   

17.
18.
In the present work, we studied the effectiveness of the predominant halophytes of Soliman sabkha (Tecticornia indica and Suaeda fruticosa) to promote soil biological activities and ecosystem productivity. Soil Arylsulphatese ARY, β-glucosidase β-GLU, phosphatase PHO, invertase INV, urease URE, and dehydogenase DES activities in Extra- and Intra-tuft halophytes and plant productivity were assessed. Results revealed a high increase of microbial community and ARY, β-GLU, PHO, INV, URE and DES activities (+298%, +400%, +800%, +350%, +320%, +25% and +759%, respectively) in Intra-tuft rhizosphere as compared to Extra-tuft one, which is likely due to the significant decrease of salinity in the rhizosphere of Tecticornia indica and Suaeda fruticosa. Both perennial plants exhibited high productivities (7.4 t dry weight ha?1 and 2.2 t dry weight ha?1, respectively) and Na+-hyperaccumulating capacities (0.75 t Na+ ha?1 and 0.22 t Na+ ha?1, respectively), reducing salt constraint and favouring soil fertility. This constitutes a promising alternative to enhance productivity in such a salt-affected biotope by offering suitable microhabitat for annual glycophytes.  相似文献   

19.
While the role of the vacuolar NHX Na+/H+ exchangers in plant salt tolerance has been demonstrated on numerous occasions, their control over cytosolic ionic relations has never been functionally analysed in the context of subcellular Na+ and K+ homeostasis. In this work, PutNHX1 and SeNHX1 were cloned from halophytes Puccinellia tenuiflora and Salicornia europaea and transiently expressed in Arabidopsis wild type Col-0 and the nhx1 mutant. Phylogentic analysis, topological prediction, analysis of evolutionary conservation, the topology structure and analysis of hydrophobic or polar regions of PutNHX1 and SeNHX1 indicated that they are unique tonoplast Na+/H+ antiporters with characteristics for salt tolerance. As a part of the functional assessment, cytosolic and vacuolar Na+ and K+ in different root tissues and ion fluxes from root mature zone of Col-0, nhx1 and their transgenic lines were measured. Transgenic lines sequestered large quantity of Na+ into root cell vacuoles and also promoted high cytosolic and vacuolar K+ accumulation. Expression of PutNHX1 and SeNHX1 led to significant transient root Na+ uptake in the four transgenic lines upon recovery from salt treatment. In contrast, the nhx1 mutant maintained a prolonged Na+ efflux and the nhx1:PutNHX1 and nhx1:SeNHX1 lines started to actively pump Na+ out of the cell. Overall, our findings suggest that PutNHX1 and SeNHX1 improve Na+ sequestration in the vacuole and K+ retention in the cytosol and vacuole of root cells of Arabidopsis, and that they interact with other regulatory mechanisms to provide a highly orchestrated regulation of ionic relations among intracellular cell compartments.  相似文献   

20.
Modern concepts on structural, physiological, and biochemical aspects of salt tolerance of higher plants were considered. Integral physiological processes, such as growth and photosynthesis of glycophytes and halophytes in the context of their ecological plasticity, variety of their adaptive strategies developed in the course of their evolution, and natural selection, were discussed. Analysis of the known anatomical and morphological adaptations of halophytes (succulence, special salt-excreting structures, features associated with special tissues growth, leaf kranz-anatomy and mesostructure) providing their salt tolerance was conducted. The most important physiological and biochemical adaptations of such plants to salinity related to uptake, accumulation and excretion of Na+ and Cl, peculiarities of membrane composition and the pigment system, and protection against osmotic and oxidative stresses were described. The association of physiological and biochemical peculiarities of halophytes with ecological salt tolerance strategy was discussed.  相似文献   

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