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1.
Thellungiella halophila is a salt tolerant relative of Arabidopsis thaliana with high genetic and morphological similarity. In the present study, effects of salinity on germination and seedling growth of T. halophila and A. thaliana were compared. The present results showed that the salinity inhibited seed germination in both species. Unexpectedly, percentages of seed germination in A. thaliana were higher than T. halophila in a range of 0?C200?mM NaCl. Seeds of both species could not germinate when the concentration of NaCl was over 200?mM. However, when compared with A. thaliana, seeds of T. halophila did not suffer ion toxicity, as evidenced by the higher final germination rate after ungerminated seeds pretreated with NaCl were transferred to distilled water. Seedlings of T. halophila were more salt tolerant than those of A. thaliana, e.g., seedlings of T. halophila had better plant growth (root length, fresh and dry mass), higher chlorophyll content, less MDA content and higher proline content and K+/Na+ ratio under salinity. These results indicate that T. halophila is more salt tolerant than A. thaliana during both seed germination and seedling stages and explain why A. thaliana is excluded from saline locations and T. halophila can survive in saline soils.  相似文献   

2.
The eco-physiology of salt tolerance, with an emphasis on K+ nutrition and proline accumulation, was investigated in the halophyte Thellungiella halophila and in both wild type and eskimo-1 mutant of the glycophyte Arabidopsis thaliana, which differ in their proline accumulation capacity. Plants cultivated in inert sand were challenged for 3 weeks with up to 500 mM NaCl. Low salinity significantly decreased A. thaliana growth, whereas growth restriction was significant only at salt concentrations equal to or exceeding 300 mM NaCl in T. halophila. Na+ content generally increased with the amount of salt added in the culture medium in both species, but T. halophila showed an ability to control Na+ accumulation in shoots. The analysis of the relationship between water and Na+ contents suggested an apoplastic sodium accumulation in both species; this trait was more pronounced in A. thaliana than in T. halophila. The better NaCl tolerance in the latter was associated with a better K+ supply, resulting in higher K+/Na+ ratios. It was also noteworthy that, despite highly accumulating proline, the A. thaliana eskimo-1 mutant was the most salt-sensitive species. Taken together, our findings indicate that salt tolerance may be partly linked to the plants’ ability to control Na+ influx and to ensure appropriate K+ nutrition, but is not linked to proline accumulation.  相似文献   

3.
4.
Gupta  N.K.  Meena  S.K.  Gupta  S.  Khandelwal  S.K. 《Photosynthetica》2002,40(4):535-539
Effect of NaCl (electrical conductivity of 0, 5, 10, 15, and 20 dS m–1) on growth, gas exchange, and ion uptake in two Ziziphus species (Z. rotundifolia and Z. nummularia) differing in salt tolerance was studied. At 30 and 45 d after first leaf initiation, the dry mass of shoot and leaves, and rates of net photosynthesis (P N) and transpiration (E) decreased significantly with increasing NaCl concentration whereas membrane injury and accumulation of proline increased. The sodium content was highest in the roots of Z. rotundifolia and in the leaves of Z. nummularia. Potassium content did not differ much in the roots but it was significantly higher in the leaves of Z. rotundifolia at 30 and 45 d of observations. Thus both these species were tolerant to salinity but at high salinity Z. rotundifolia performed better owing to its higher P N and E, restricted translocation of sodium from root to leaves, and larger accumulation of potassium in the leaves.  相似文献   

5.
Thellungiella halophila is a salt-tolerant relative of Arabidopsis thaliana with high genetic and morphological similarity. In a saline environment, T. halophila accumulates less sodium and retains more potassium than A. thaliana. Detailed electrophysiological comparison of ion currents in roots of both species showed that, unlike A. thaliana, T. halophila exhibits high potassium/sodium selectivity of the instantaneous current. This current differs in its pharmacological profile from the current through inward- and outward-rectifying K(+) channels insofar as it is insensitive to Cs(+) and TEA(+), but resembles voltage-independent channels of glycophytes as it is inhibited by external Ca(2+). Addition of Cs(+) and TEA(+) to the growth medium confirmed the key role of the instantaneous current in whole-plant sodium accumulation. A negative shift in the reversal potential of the instantaneous current under high-salt conditions was essential for decreasing sodium influx to twofold lower than the corresponding value in A. thaliana. The lower overall sodium permeability of the T. halophila root plasma membrane resulted in a smaller membrane depolarization during salt exposure, thus allowing the cells to maintain their driving force for potassium uptake. Our data provide quantitative evidence that specific features of ion channels lead to superior sodium/potassium homeostasis in a halophyte compared with a closely related glycophyte.  相似文献   

6.
Sodium relations in Chenopodiaceae: a comparative approach   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Sodium relations of 15 species of Chenopodiaceae were studied in seedlings grown on quartz sand at 10 mol m?3 of sodium and potassium. Uptake of sodium and potassium into whole plants and shoots was followed over 2 weeks. High alkali ion uptake rates were found in all species. The apparent selectivity of alkali ion uptake showed a continuous variation between species, from nearly perfect sodium exclusion to negligible cation selection. K/Na ratios above 6 were found in the shoots of eight species. For most of these plants above ground sodium concentrations were highest in the hypocotyls. However, in Chenopodium hybridum (shoot K/Na = 10) and C. urbicum (shoot K/Na = 17) above ground sodium concentrations were lowest in hypocotyls and highest in leaves, as in those species accumulating larger amounts of sodium. These differences are discussed with respect to the underlying mechanisms of ion regulation.  相似文献   

7.
To provide a framework for studies to understand the contribution of SALT OVERLY SENSITIVE1 (SOS1) to salt tolerance in Thellungiella halophila, we sequenced and annotated a 193-kb T. halophila BAC containing a putative SOS1 locus (ThSOS1) and compared the sequence to the orthologous 146-kb region of the genome of its salt-sensitive relative, Arabidopsis thaliana. Overall, the two sequences were colinear, but three major expansion/contraction regions in T. halophila were found to contain five Long Terminal Repeat retrotransposons, MuDR DNA transposons and intergenic sequences that contribute to the 47.8-kb size variation in this region of the genome. Twenty-seven genes were annotated in the T. halophila BAC including the putative ThSOS1 locus. ThSOS1 shares gene structure and sequence with A. thaliana SOS1 including 11 predicted transmembrane domains and a cyclic nucleotide-binding domain; however, different patterns of Simple Sequence Repeats were found within a 540-bp region upstream of SOS1 in the two species.  相似文献   

8.
Na+/H+ exchanger catalyzes the countertransport of Na+ and H+ across membranes. Using the rapid amplification of cDNA ends method, a Na+/H+ antiporter gene (ThNHX1) was isolated from a halophytic plant, salt cress (Thellungiella halophila). The deduced amino acid sequence contained 545 amino acid residues with a conserved amiloride-binding domain (87LFFIYLLPPI96) and shared more than 94% identity with that of AtNHX1 from Arabidopsis thaliana. The ThNHX1 mRNA level was upregulated by salt and other stresses (abscisic acid, polyethylene glycol, and high temperature). This gene partially complemented the Na+/Li+-sensitive phenotype of a yeast mutant that was deficient in the endosomal–vacuolar Na+/H+ antiporter ScNHX1. Overexpression of ThNHX1 in Arabidopsis increased salt tolerance of transgenic plants compared with the wild-type plants. In addition, the silencing of ThNHX1 gene in T. halophila caused the transgenic plants to be more salt and osmotic sensitive than wild-type plant. Together, these results suggest that ThNHX1 may function as a tonoplast Na+/H+ antiporter and play an important role in salt tolerance of T. halophila. Chunxia Wu, Xiuhua Gao, and Xiangqiang Kong contributed equally to this work.  相似文献   

9.
Ecophysiology of Salt Excretion in Aeluropus litoralis (Graminae)   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Various aspects of salt excretion from leaves of Aeluropus were investigated. Salt excretion exhibited an optimum-type of curve when measured against external salt concentration, while sodium content of the leaves increased linearly. The ‘relative excretion’, i.e. rate of excreted ions: change in leaf ion content, was maximal in the low salt concentration range, and decreased when external sodium chloride concentration increased. Concentration of the excreted droplets was higher than the external concentration when the leaves were exposed to low salt concentrations in the medium, but the reverse occurred when the external salt concentrations were high. The excretion process was sensitive to water-stress conditions, caused either by high external salt concentrations or by exposure to dry atmosphere. A considerable fraction of the leaf sodium content in salt-treated leaves was only slightly available for excretion. Salt excretion in Aeluropus was enhanced by light. Such enhancement was indirect and is attributed to the increase of salt transport via transpiration stream. Selectivity of the salt-excretion mechanism is in favour of sodium and against potassium. On the other hand, potassium has a high affinity for the accumulation systems within the leaves. The ecological significance of the results is discussed.  相似文献   

10.
Seeds of many coastal plants can survive exposure to seawater and may be dispersed long distances by the ocean. The salt tolerance or avoidance strategies of seeds are poorly understood, even though these traits may fundamentally influence dispersal and recruitment in coastal dunes. This research aimed to demonstrate how salt exclusion or localization within germinating seeds may affect salt tolerance. To determine the response of seeds to external salinity during imbibition (water uptake), it was necessary to quantify uptake and spatially resolve the internal distribution of salt. Flame photometry was used to quantify salt concentration in imbibing seeds and a new application of full‐spectrum X‐ray mapping allowed visualization of the spatial distribution and relative abundance of salt. As external salinity increased, salt‐sensitive Spyridium globulosum (Rhamnaceae) seeds accumulated sodium and chlorine in the seed embryo, while potassium was increasingly displaced and germination was reduced. Conversely, salt‐tolerant Ficinia nodosa (Cyperaceae) seeds avoided ion uptake and germination was not affected by imbibition in high sodium chloride (NaCl) concentrations. These results provide insight into mechanisms of salt tolerance/avoidance during imbibition and early germination and suggest that oceanic dispersal can be a viable explanation for the distribution of some plant species. © 2013 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2013, 173 , 129–142.  相似文献   

11.
Sodium Exclusion by Chenopodium Species   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The uptake of sodium, potassium and chloride in Chenopodiumalbum L. and Chenopodium schraderianum Roemer and Schultes wasfollowed over 2 weeks. Ion concentrations and ion fluxes werecompared to those observed in Atriplex prostrata Boucher exDC. and Suaeda maritima (L.) Dum. as halophilic Chenopodiaceae,and to Phaseolus aureus Roxb. and Trifolium alexandrinum L.as sodium-excluding Fabaceae. Seedlings of all species werecultivated in quartz sand at 10 mmol dm–3 of potassium,sodium, and chloride. For Fabaceae low uptake rates of alkali ions and sodium retentionin roots are substantiated in Phaseolus. Results for Atriplexand Suaeda illustrate high uptake rates of alkali ions and preferentialtransport of sodium to the shoots. In contrast to halophilic chenopods, Chenopodium album andC.schraderianum show low sodium concentrations in shoots and ahigh K-Na-selectivity of net ion fluxes. Evidence for sodiumexclusion by their roots is presented. Sodium exclusion by Chenopodiumspecies is not as efficient as in Phaseolus, but is within therange of that found in other Fabaceae. Unlike other glycophytes,the Chenopodium species show the high rates of alkali ion uptakewhich have been found in their halophilic relatives. Key words: Chenopodiaceae, Fabaceae, ion uptake, salt exclusion, K-Na-selectivity  相似文献   

12.
Early changes in physiological and oxidative status induced by salt stress were monitored in two Brassicaceae plants differing in their tolerance to salinity, Cakile maritima (halophyte) and Arabidopsis thaliana (glycophyte). Growth response and antioxidant defense of C. maritima under 400 mM NaCl were compared with those of A. thaliana exposed to 100 mM NaCl. Salinity induced early growth reduction that is less pronounced in C. maritima than in A. thaliana. Maximum hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) level occurred in the leaves of both species 4 h after the onset of salt treatment. A rapid decline in H2O2 concentration was observed thereafter in C. maritima, whereas it remained high in A. thaliana. Correlatively, superoxide dismutase, catalase and peroxidase activities increased at 4 h of treatment in C. maritima and decreased thereafter. However, the activity of these enzymes remained higher in treated plants than that in controls, regardless of the duration of treatment, in A. thaliana. The concentrations of malondialdehyde (MDA) reached maximum values at 24 h of salt stress in both species. Again, MDA levels decreased later in C. maritima, but remained high in A. thaliana. The contents of α‐tocopherol remained constant during salt stress in C. maritima and decreased during the first 24 h of salt stress and then remained low in A. thaliana. The results clearly showed that C. maritima, in contrast to A. thaliana, can rapidly evolve physiological and antioxidant mechanisms to adapt to salt and manage the oxidative stress. This may explain, at least partially, the difference in salt tolerance between halophytes and glycophytes.  相似文献   

13.
The investigation concerns the influence of potassium on the transpiration rate of Triticum aestivum and Pisum sativum grown in nutrient solutions. Plants with high amounts of potassium were found to have the lowest transpiration rates. Shoot/root ratio, stomatal frequency, and stomatal aperture were correlated with the potassium concentration in the leaves. In Triticum no correlations with leaf concentration of Na were evident. Short term experiments were carried out in order to investigate the effects on the transpiration rate of a sudden increase in potassium concentration in the nutrient solution. An addition of potassium chloride to potassium deficient wheat plants resulted in a decrease in the transpiration rate of up to 50% within two hours. Comparative tests with sodium chloride resulted in a decrease in transpiration rate of the same magnitude, indicating that the short-time reaction is not specific to potassium. The experiments show that the transpiration rate can be regulated by varied potassium and sodium concentrations. The observed effect is supposed to be due to changes in the stomatal aperture.  相似文献   

14.
Summary Salicornia europaea, Puccinellia maritima, Triglochin maritima, Aster tripolium, Plantago maritima, Armeria maritima, Juncus gerardii andFestuca rubra, collected as seed from a salt marsh at Portaferry, County Down, were grown on saline (340 mM NaCl) and non saline nutrient solutions at five concentrations of manganese sulphate (0.025–10.0 mM). After an eight week growing period, shoot and root yields and the concentrations of sodium, potassium, calcium and manganese in the shoots were determined.Except forS. europaea the saline treatments had a strongly limiting effect on plant growth. Each of the species investigated showed a degree of tolerance to high concentrations of manganese which was similar to that of calcifuge species and plants characteristic of waterlogged sand dune slack communities, but which was very much greater than that ofArrhenatherum elatius a species usually excluded from acidic soils. There was little evidence to support the hypothesis that tolerance of high manganese concentrations was correlated with the position of the experimental plants in the salt marsh ecotone or that the manganese nutrition of halophytic and glycophytic marsh species differs. Whilst manganese uptake increased proportionally with solution manganese concentration, there were few other major effects of manganese on the balance of shoot cation concentrations in the plants investigated. Both antagonistic and synergistic effects of sodium on manganese uptake were recorded for different species.  相似文献   

15.
Natural-abundance 13C-nuclear magnetic resonance was used to probe the intracellular organic solute content of the moderately halophilic bacterium Tetragenococcus halophila. When grown in complex growth media supplemented or not with NaCl, T. halophila accumulates glycine betaine and carnitine. Unlike other moderate halophiles, T. halophila was not able to produce potent osmoprotectants (such as ectoines and glycine betaine) through de novo synthesis when cultured in defined medium under hyperosmotic constraint. Addition of 2 mM carnitine, glycine betaine, or choline to defined medium improved growth parameters, not only at high salinity (up to 2.5 M NaCl) but also in media lacking NaCl. These compounds were taken up when available in the surrounding medium. The transport activity occurred at low and high salinities and seems to be constitutive. Glycine betaine and carnitine were accumulated by T. halophila in an unmodified form, while exogenously provided choline led to an intracellular accumulation of glycine betaine. This is the first evidence of the existence of a choline-glycine betaine pathway in a lactic acid bacterium. An assay showed that the compatible solutes strikingly repressed the accumulation of glutamate and slightly increased the intracellular potassium level only at high salinity. Interestingly, osmoprotectant-treated cells were able to maintain the intracellular sodium concentration at a relatively constant level (200 to 300 nmol/mg [dry weight]), independent of the NaCl concentration of the medium. In contrast, in the absence of osmoprotectant, the intracellular sodium content increased sharply from 200 to 2,060 nmol/mg (dry weight) when the salinity of the medium was raised from 1 to 2 M. Indeed, the imported compatible solutes play an actual role in regulating the intracellular Na+ content and confer a much higher salt tolerance to T. halophila.  相似文献   

16.
Structurally and chemically defective activated‐crumbled graphene (A‐CG) is employed to achieve unique synergy of large reversible potassium (K) and sodium (Na) ion storage capacity with fast charging and extended cyclability. A‐CG synthesis consists of low temperature spraying of graphene oxide slurry, followed by partial reduction annealing and air activation. For K storage, the reversible capacities are 340 mAh g?1 at 0.04 A g?1, 261 mAh g?1 at 0.5 A g?1, and 210 mAh g?1 at 2 A g?1. For Na storage, the reversible capacities are 280 mAh g?1 at 0.04 A g?1, 191 mAh g?1 at 0.5 A g?1, and 151 mAh g?1 at 2 A g?1. A‐CG shows a stable intermediate rate (0.5 Ag?1) cycling with both K and Na, with minimal fade after 2800 and 8000 cycles. These are among the most favorable capacity—rate capability—cyclability combinations recorded for potassium‐ion battery and sodium‐ion battery carbons. Electroanalytical studies (cyclic voltammetry, galvanostatic intermittent titration technique, b‐value) and density functional theory (DFT) reveal that enhanced electrochemical performance originates from ion adsorption at various defects, such as Stone–Wales defects. Moreover, DFT highlights enhanced thermodynamic stability of A‐CG with adsorbed K versus with adsorbed Na, explaining the unexpected higher reversible capacity with the former.  相似文献   

17.
Phosphorus availability is often limiting for plant growth. However, little is known of the pathways and mechanisms that regulate phosphorus (P) uptake and distribution in plants. We have developed a screen based on the induction of secreted root acid phosphatase activity by low‐P stress to identify mutants of Arabidopsis thaliana with defects in P metabolism. Acid phosphatase activity was detected visually in the roots of A. thaliana seedlings grown in vitro on low‐P medium, using the chromogenic substrate, 5‐bromo‐4‐chloro‐3‐indolyl‐phosphate (BCIP). In low‐P stress conditions the roots of wild‐type plants stained blue, as the induced root acid phosphatase cleaved BCIP to release the coloured product. Potential mutants were identified as having white, or pale blue, roots under these conditions. Out of approximately 79 000 T‐DNA mutagenised seedlings screened, two mutants with reduced acid phosphatase staining were further characterised. Both exhibited reduced growth and differences in their P contents when compared to wild‐type A. thaliana. The mutant with the most severe phenotype, pho3, accumulated high levels of anthocyanins and starch in a distinctive visual pattern within the leaves. The phenotypes of these mutants are distinct from two previously identified phosphorus mutants (phol and pho2) and from an acid phosphatase deficient mutant (pupl) of A. thaliana. This suggested that the screening method was robust and might lead to the identification of further mutants with the potential for increasing our understanding of P nutrition.  相似文献   

18.
Phytotoxicity bioassays and pot experiments using activated carbon both suggest that Centaurea solstitialis (yellow star-thistle) does not rely on phytotoxic root exudates for invasion of California grasslands. Pot experiments in which five native species were grown in the presence/absence of C. solstitialis and in the presence/absence of activated carbon (fully crossed design) showed that C. solstitialis competitively suppressed native species, but did not inhibit them through allelochemicals. In separate experiments examining the role of root exudates in invasion success, treatment with crude root exudates and chloroform-extracted root exudates from C. solstitialis reduced growth of the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana. However, high concentrations of the exudates (50%, v/v or 500 μg mL−1) were required to inhibit A. thaliana growth and did not result in A. thaliana mortality, suggesting the presence of only a weak growth inhibitor. Moreover, high concentrations of C. solstitialis crude root exudates did not affect the growth of five native grass species often displaced by C. solstitialis invasions in California grasslands. Finally, root exudates collected from C. solstitialis had weaker effects on a native California root parasite, Triphysaria versicolor, than root exudates collected from Zea mays, a species not renowned for its competitive or invasive capabilities. Our results suggest that, while C. solstitialis might possibly “be persuaded to yield a product that is toxic to one species or another” (Population biology of plants, Academic, 1977), we find no evidence that allelopathic root exudates play a role in the competitive success of this invasive.  相似文献   

19.
20.
The arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) symbiosis is widespread throughout the plant kingdom and important for plant nutrition and ecosystem functioning. Nonetheless, most terrestrial ecosystems also contain a considerable number of non‐mycorrhizal plants. The interaction of such non‐host plants with AM fungi (AMF) is still poorly understood. Here, in three complementary experiments, we investigated whether the non‐mycorrhizal plant Arabidopsis thaliana, the model organism for plant molecular biology and genetics, interacts with AMF. We grew A. thaliana alone or together with a mycorrhizal host species (either Trifolium pratense or Lolium multiflorum) in the presence or absence of the AMF Rhizophagus irregularis. Plants were grown in a dual‐compartment system with a hyphal mesh separating roots of A. thaliana from roots of the host species, avoiding direct root competition. The host plants in the system ensured the presence of an active AM fungal network. AM fungal networks caused growth depressions in A. thaliana of more than 50% which were not observed in the absence of host plants. Microscopy analyses revealed that R. irregularis supported by a host plant was capable of infecting A. thaliana root tissues (up to 43% of root length colonized), but no arbuscules were observed. The results reveal high susceptibility of A. thaliana to R. irregularis, suggesting that A. thaliana is a suitable model plant to study non‐host/AMF interactions and the biological basis of AM incompatibility.  相似文献   

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