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1.
Non-selected and sodium chloride selected callus lines of Vacdnium corymbosum L.cv Blue Crop and cv. Denise Blue were grown on media supplemented with 0–100 mM NaCl. For both cultivars, fresh weight and dry weight yields were greater in selected lines on all levels of NaCl. Selected lines of Blue Crop displayed better growth than selected lines of Denise Blue at most concentrations of NaCl. Internal Na+ and Cl concentrations in selected and non-selected lines of both cultivars increased as external concentration was raised. However, selected lines of Blue Crop and Denise Blue accumulated more Na+ and Cl than non-selected lines. Selected lines of both cultivars maintained higher levels of K+ than non-selected lines on all external NaCl levels. Selected lines of Blue Crop had higher levels of Na+ and Cl than that of Denise Blue. The results suggest Na+ and Cl accumulation could be a mechanism allowing better growth in selected lines at moderate salinity levels (50–75 mM NaCl).  相似文献   

2.
B. Demmig  K. Winter 《Planta》1986,168(3):421-426
Concentrations of four major solutes (Na+, K+, Cl-, proline) were determined in isolated, intact chloroplasts from the halophyte Mesembryanthemum crystallinum L. following long-term exposure of plants to three levels of NaCl salinity in the rooting medium. Chloroplasts were obtained by gentle rupture of leaf protoplasts. There was either no or only small leakage of inorganic ions from the chloroplasts to the medium during three rapidly performed washing steps involving precipitation and re-suspension of chloroplast pellets. Increasing NaCl salinity of the rooting medium resulted in a rise of Na+ und Cl- in the total leaf sap, up to approximately 500 and 400 mM, respectively, for plants grown at 400 mM NaCl. However, chloroplast levels of Na+ und Cl- did not exceed 160–230 and 40–60 mM, respectively, based upon a chloroplast osmotic volume of 20–30 l per mg chlorophyll. At 20 mM NaCl in the rooting medium, the Na+/K+ ratio of the chloroplasts was about 1; at 400 mM NaCl the ratio was about 5. Growth at 400 mM NaCl led to markedly increased concentrations of proline in the leaf sap (8 mM) compared with the leaf sap of plants grown in culture solution without added NaCl (proline 0.25 mM). Although proline was fivefold more concentrated in the chloroplasts than in the total leaf sap of plants treated with 400 mM NaCl, the overall contribution of proline to the osmotic adjustment of chloroplasts was small. The capacity to limit chloroplast Cl- concentrations under conditions of high external salinity was in contrast to an apparent affinity of chloroplasts for Cl- under conditions of low Cl- availability.Abbreviation Chl chlorophyll  相似文献   

3.

Aims

Soil salinity varies greatly in the plant rhizosphere. The effect of nonuniform salinity on the growth and physiology response of alfalfa plants was determined to improve understanding of salt stress tolerance mechanisms of alfalfa.

Methods

Plant growth, predawn leaf water potential, water uptake, and tissue ionic content were studied in alfalfa plants grown hydroponically for 9 days using a split-root system, with uniform salinity or horizontally nonuniform salinity treatments (0/S, 75/S, and 150/S corresponding to 0, 75, and 150 mM NaCl on the low salt side, respectively).

Results

Compared with uniform high salinity, 0/S and 75/S treatments significantly increased the alfalfa shoot dry mass and stem extension rate. Compensatory water uptake by low salt roots of 0/S and 75/S treatments was observed. However, decreased leaf Na+ concentration, increased leaf K+/Na+, and compensatory growth of roots on the low salt side were observed only following the 0/S treatment.

Conclusions

Nonuniform salinity dose not enhance plant growth once a threshold NaCl concentration in low salinity growth medium has been reached. Compensation of water uptake from the low-salt root zone and regulation of K+/Na+ homeostasis in low salt root play more important role than regulation of leaf ions in enhancing alfalfa growth under nonuniform salinity.
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4.

Background and aims

Salt is known to accumulate in the root-zone of Na+ excluding glycophytes under saline conditions. We examined the effect of soil salinity on Na+ and Cl? depletion or accumulation in the root-zone of the halophyte (Atriplex nummularia Lindl).

Methods

A pot experiment was conducted in soil to examine Na+ and Cl? concentrations adjacent to roots at four initial NaCl treatments (20, 50, 200 or 400 mM NaCl in the soil solution). Plant water use was manipulated by leaving plants with all leaves intact, removing approximately 50 % of leaves, or removing all leaves. Daily evapotranspiration was replaced by watering undrained pots to weight with deionised water. After 35-38 days, samples were taken of the bulk soil and of soil loosely- and closely-adhering to the roots.

Results

In plants with leaves intact grown with 200 and 400 mM NaCl, average Na+ and Cl? concentrations in the closely adhering soil were about twice the concentrations of the bulk soil. Ion accumulation increased with final leaf area and with cumulative transpiration over the duration of the trial. By contrast, in plants grown with the lowest salinity treatment (20 mM NaCl), Na+ and Cl? concentrations decreased in the closely adhering soil with increasing leaf area and increasing cumulative water use.

Conclusions

Our data show that Na+ and Cl? are depleted from the root-zone of A. nummularia at low salinity but accumulate in the root-zone at moderate to high salinity, and that the ions are drawn towards the plant in the transpiration stream.  相似文献   

5.
Callus cultures were initiated from soybean (Glycine max (L.) Merr cv. Acme) cotyledons onMiller's basal medium supplemented with 2 mg L–1NAA and 0.5 mg L–1 kinetin. Growing cells wereexposed to increasing concentrations of NaCl in themedium. A concentration of 100 mM NaCl completelyinhibited callus growth. After incubation for 28 d,cells which could tolerate this concentration of NaClgrew to form cell colonies. A NaCl-tolerant line wasobtained through continuous subculturing on 100 mMNaCl. Salt tolerance in this culture was characterizedby an altered growth behavior, reduced cell volume, and accumulation of Na+, Cl, proline and sugars when grown under salt stress, as well as on normal media. These characteristics, which proved tobe stable after the culture was transferred to asalt-free medium, is commonly associated with halophytes. Presented data suggest that this salt tolerance is the result of a shift towards a halophytic behavior.  相似文献   

6.
A salt-tolerant callus line of Lycopersicon peruvianum has been obtained by exposing the cells, in suspension cultures and then in callus, to increasing concentrations of NaCl (50–350mM). This selected line grew better than the nonselected line at all levels of NaCl. Moreover, this selected line grew better in media containing salt than in those without it. It retained its tolerance after subculture for 3 passages (3 months) on salt-free medium. The growth of the selected line in mannitol was similar to that of the nonselected line, which suggested that the superiority of the selected line under salt stress was not due to osmotic stress tolerance. The ions SO 4 –– and K+ were highly toxic to L. peruvianum root callus, while Na+, Mg++ and Cl were less toxic.  相似文献   

7.
The salt-induced H+-ATPase activity and osmotic adjustment responses of Catharanthus roseus (L.) G. Don suspension cultures were studied. Cells were treated with 0, 50 or 100mM NaCl for 7days or were maintained for 8 months with 50 mM NaCl (50T cells). Growth, osmotic potential (), ions content, soluble sugars, proline and total amino acids were determined in the sap of control and salt-treated cells. Salinity reduced cell growth and . The higher decrease in the in salt-treated cells was due to higher accumulation of Na+ and Cl. The levels of organic solutes, such as soluble sugars, free proline and total amino acids, increased with salt treatment. These results suggest that salt-tolerant cells are able to osmotically adjust. Salinity treatments stimulated H+-ATPase activity. Immunodetection of the enzyme showed that the increased activity was due to an increased amount of protein in the plasmalemma. The induction by NaCl, especially at 100 mM NaCl and for 50T cells, could account for the K+ and Cl uptake but not for higher or lower tolerance.  相似文献   

8.
The effects of sodium chloride salinity and hypoxia were studied in eight wheat lines and three wheat-Thinopyrum amphiploids in vermiculite-gravel culture. The lines were treated with either 100 or 150 mol m–3 NaCl with and without hypoxia. Saline hypoxic conditions significantly reduced the vegetative growth, water use, grain and straw yields for all wheat varieties except the amphiploids, whereas NaCl or hypoxia alone had less pronounced effects. In addition, saline hypoxic stress reduced K+ concentration and increased significantly the Na+ and Cl concentrations in cell sap expressed from leaves. There was more Na+ and Cl accumulation in wheats than the amphiploids in hypoxic conditions at 150 mol m–3 NaCl. Of the wheats, Pato was the most sensitive at all stress levels while aTriticum aestivum cv. Chinese Spring ×Thinopyrum elongatum amphiploid was the most tolerant of the three amphiploids.  相似文献   

9.
Ascorbic acid (AsA) is naturally occurring compound with antioxidant activity and plays a pivotal role in plant cell adaptation to salinity stress. The objective of this work was to assess the influence of exogenous AsA on the embryogenic callus of indica rice (Oryza sativa L.) cv. MRQ74 cultivated under saline conditions. NaCl (200 mM) decreased callus fresh and dry masses, relative growth rate, and K+ and Ca+2 content, and increased Na+ content and Na+/K+ ratio. Application of AsA (0.5 or 1 mM) alleviated these effects of salinity. Activities of peroxidase, catalase, superoxide dismutase, as well as content of proline increased due to the NaCl treatment, and these parameters were mostly further increased by 0.5 mM AsA. Thus, AsA can increase callus tolerance to NaCl stress.  相似文献   

10.
Cell lines of Oryza sativa L. (cv. Taipei-309) were adapted to 30 mM LiCl and 150 mM NaCl. Both adapted lines were considerably more tolerant than non adapted line when grown on 200, 250 and 300 mM NaCl and 30 mM LiCl stresses. The tolerance of LiCl-adapted line to NaCl (150 to 300 mM) and the tolerance of NaCl-adapted cells line to LiCl (30 mM) indicated that there was a cross-adaptation towards alkali metals (Na+ and Li+) not the Cl. Na+ and K+ contents of all lines which increased with increasing medium salinity but to a different degree. The increase in Na+ and K+ content in NaCl-adapted and non-adapted lines were comparable, while LiCl-adapted line accumulated significantly lower Na+and higher K+ content. Proline content of all lines increased with the increase in NaCl-stress but the magnitude of increase was much higher in the LiCl-adapted than other lines. The differential response of adapted lines to NaCl stress in accumulating proline and maintaining the ionic contents reveals that adapted lines have evolved different features of adaptation to cope with NaCl stress.  相似文献   

11.

Background and Aims

There is a need to evaluate the salt tolerance of plant species that can be cultivated as crops under saline conditions. Crambe maritima is a coastal plant, usually occurring on the driftline, with potential use as a vegetable crop. The aim of this experiment was to determine the growth response of Crambe maritima to various levels of airborne and soil-borne salinity and the ecophysiological mechanisms underlying these responses.

Methods

In the greenhouse, plants were exposed to salt spray (400 mm NaCl) as well as to various levels of root-zone salinity (RZS) of 0, 50, 100, 200 and 300 mm NaCl during 40 d. The salt tolerance of Crambe maritima was assessed by the relative growth rate (RGR) and its components. To study possible salinity effects on the tissue and cellular level, the leaf succulence, tissue Na+ concentrations, Na+ : K+ ratio, net K+/Na+ selectivity, N, P, K+, Ca2+, Mg2+, proline, soluble sugar concentrations, osmotic potential, total phenolics and antioxidant capacity were measured.

Key Results

Salt spray did not affect the RGR of Crambe maritima. However, leaf thickness and leaf succulence increased with salt spray. Root zone salinities up to 100 mm NaCl did not affect growth. However, at 200 mm NaCl RZS the RGR was reduced by 41 % compared with the control and by 56 % at 300 mm NaCl RZS. The reduced RGR with increasing RZS was largely due to the reduced specific leaf area, which was caused by increased leaf succulence as well as by increased leaf dry matter content. No changes in unit leaf rate were observed but increased RZS resulted in increased Na+ and proline concentrations, reduced K+, Ca2+ and Mg2+ concentrations, lower osmotic potential and increased antioxidant capacity. Proline concentrations of the leaves correlated strongly (r = 0·95) with RZS concentrations and not with plant growth.

Conclusions

Based on its growth response, Crambe maritima can be classified as a salt spray tolerant plant that is sensitive to root zone salinities exceeding 100 mm NaCl.  相似文献   

12.

Background and aims

Salinity is an increasing problem for agricultural production worldwide. Understanding how Na+ enters plants is important if reducing Na+ influx, a key component of the regulation of Na+ accumulation in plants and improving salt tolerance of crop plants, is to be achieved. Our previous work indicated that two distinct low-affinity Na+ uptake pathways exist in the halophyte Suaeda maritima. Here, we report the external NaCl concentration at which uptake switches from pathway 1 to pathway 2 and the kinetics of the interaction between external K+ concentration and Na+ uptake and accumulation in S. maritima in order to determine the roles of K+ transporters or channels in low-affinity Na+ uptake.

Methods

Na+ influx, Na+ and K+ accumulations in S. maritima exposed to various concentrations of NaCl (0–200 mM) were analyzed in the absence and presence of the inhibitors TEA and Ba+ (5 mM TEA or 3 mM Ba2+) or KCl (0, 10 or 50 mM).

Results

Our earlier proposal was confirmed and extended that there are two distinct low-affinity Na+ uptake pathways in S. maritima: pathway 1 might be mediated by a HKT-type transporter under low salinity conditions and pathway 2 by an AKT1-type channel or a KUP/HAK/KT type transporter under high salinity conditions. The external NaCl concentration at which two distinct low-affinity Na+ uptake switches from pathway 1 to pathway 2, the ‘turning point’, is between 90 and 95 mM. Over a short period (12 h) of Na+ and K+ treatments, a low concentration of K+ (10 mM) facilitated Na+ uptake by S. maritima under high salinity (100–200 mM NaCl), whether or not the plants had been subjected to a longer (3 d) period of K+ starvation. The kinetics suggests that low concentration of K+ (10 mM) might activate AKT1-type channels or KUP/HAK/KT-type transporters under high salinity (100–200 mM NaCl).

Conclusions

The turning-point of external NaCl concentrations for the two low-affinity Na+ uptake pathways in Suaeda maritima is between 90 and 95 mM. A low concentration of K+ (10 mM) might activate AKT1 or KUP/HAK/KT and facilitate Na+ uptake under high salinity (100–200 mM NaCl). The kinetics of K+ on Na+ uptake and accumulation in S maritima are also consistent with there being two low-affinity Na+ uptake pathways.  相似文献   

13.

Background and Aims

The source of nitrogen plays an important role in salt tolerance of plants. In this study, the effects of NaCl on net uptake, accumulation and transport of ions were investigated in Nerium oleander with ammonium or nitrate as the nitrogen source in order to analyse differences in uptake and cycling of ions within plants.

Methods

Plants were grown in a greenhouse in hydroponics under different salt treatments (control vs. 100 mm NaCl) with ammonium or nitrate as the nitrogen source, and changes in ion concentration in plants, xylem sap exuded from roots and stems, and phloem sap were determined.

Key Results

Plant weight, leaf area and photosynthetic rate showed a higher salt tolerance of nitrate-fed plants compared with that of ammonium-fed plants. The total amount of Na+ transported in the xylem in roots, accumulated in the shoot and retranslocated in the phloem of ammonium-fed plants under salt treatment was 1·8, 1·9 and 2·7 times more, respectively, than that of nitrate-treated plants. However, the amount of Na+ accumulated in roots in nitrate-fed plants was about 1·5 times higher than that in ammonium-fed plants. Similarly, Cl transport via the xylem to the shoot and its retranslocation via the phloem (Cl cycling) were far greater with ammonium treatment than with nitrate treatment under conditions of salinity. The uptake and accumulation of K+ in shoots decreased more due to salinity in ammonium-fed plants compared with nitrate-fed plants. In contrast, K+ cycling in shoots increased due to salinity, with higher rates in the ammonium-treated plants.

Conclusions

The faster growth of nitrate-fed plants under conditions of salinity was associated with a lower transport and accumulation of Na+ and Cl in the shoot, whereas in ammonium-fed plants accumulation and cycling of Na+ and Cl in shoots probably caused harmful effects and reduced growth of plants.Key words: Mineral cycling, Nerium oleander, nitrogen source, salinity, xylem and phloem transport  相似文献   

14.
Summary If in vitro culture is to be used for evaluating the salt tolerance of tomato hybrids and segregant populations in a breeding programme, it is previously necessary to get quick and reliable traits. In this work, growth and physiological responses to salinity of two interspecific hybrids between the cultivated tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill) and its wild salt-tolerant species L pennellii are compared to those of their parents. The leaf callus of the first subculture was grown on media amended with 0, 35, 70, 105, 140, 175 and 210 mM NaCl for 40 days. Relative fresh weight growth of callus in response to increased salinity in the culture medium was much greater in L pennellii than in the tomato cultivars, and greater in the hybrids than in the wild species. Moreover, the different salt tolerance degree of hybrids was related to that of female parents. At high salt levels, only Cl accumulation was higher in L pennellii than in tomato cultivars, whereas in the hybrids both Cl, and Na+ accumulation were higher than in their parents. Proline increased with salinity in the callus of all genotypes; these increases were much higher in the tomato cultivars than in L pennellii, and the hybrids showed a similar response to that of the wild species. Salt-treated callus of the tomato cultivars showed significant increases in valine, isoleucine and leucine contents compared to control callus tissue. In contrast, these amino acids in callus tissues of the wild species and hybrids showed a tendency to decrease with increasing salinity.  相似文献   

15.
Summary Growth and physiological responses of date palm. Phoenix dactylifera L. cv. Barhee, callus to salinity stress were examined. Callus induced from shoot tips of offshoots was cultured on Murashige and Skoog medium supplemented with NaCl at concentrations ranging from 0 to 225 mM, in consective increments of 25 mM. Data obtained after 6 wk of exposure to salt have shown a significant increase in callus proliferation in response to 25 mM NaCl the lowest level tested, beyond which callus weight decreased. At 125 mM NaCl and higher, callus growth was nearly completely inhibited. Physiological studies on callus exposed to salt stress have shown an increase in proline accumulation in response to increased salinity. Proline accumulation was correlated to callus growth inhibition. Furthermore, increasing the concentration of NaCl in the culture medium generally resulted in a steady increase in Na+ and reduction in K+ concentrations. However, at 25 mM NaCl, the only level at which callus growth was significantly enhanced, an increase in K+ content was noted, in comparison to the NaCl free control. In response to increasing external NaCl level, the Na+/K+ ratio increased The Na+/K+ ratio was positively correlated to proline accumulation and hence callus growth inhibition. This study provides, an understanding of the response of date palm callus to salinity, which is important for future studies aimed at developing strategies for selecting and characterizing somaclonal variants tolerant to salt stress.  相似文献   

16.

Main conclusion

Salt sensitivity in chickpea is determined by Na+ toxicity, whereas relatively high leaf tissue concentrations of Cl? were tolerated, and the osmotic component of 60-mM NaCl was not detrimental.Chickpea (Cicer arietinum L.) is sensitive to salinity. This study dissected the responses of chickpea to osmotic and ionic components (Na+ and/or Cl?) of salt stress. Two genotypes with contrasting salt tolerances were exposed to osmotic treatments (?0.16 and ?0.29 MPa), Na+-salts, Cl?-salts, or NaCl at 0, 30, or 60 mM for 42 days and growth, tissue ion concentrations and leaf gas-exchange were assessed. The osmotic treatments and Cl?-salts did not affect growth, whereas Na+-salts and NaCl treatments equally impaired growth in either genotype. Shoot Na+ and Cl? concentrations had markedly increased, whereas shoot K+ had declined in the NaCl treatments, but both genotypes had similar shoot concentrations of each of these individual ions after 14 and 28 days of treatments. Genesis836 achieved higher net photosynthetic rate (64–84 % of control) compared with Rupali (35–56 % of control) at equivalent leaf Na+ concentrations. We conclude that (1) salt sensitivity in chickpea is determined by Na+ toxicity, and (2) the two contrasting genotypes appear to differ in ‘tissue tolerance’ of high Na+. This study provides a basis for focus on Na+ tolerance traits for future varietal improvement programs for salinity tolerance in chickpea.
  相似文献   

17.
The effects of NaCl salinity on growth, morphology and photosynthesis of Salvinia natans (L.) All. were investigated by growing plants in a growth chamber at NaCl concentrations of 0, 50, 100 and 150 mM. The relative growth rates were high (ca. 0.3 d−1) at salinities up to 50 mM and decreased to less than 0.2 d−1 at higher salinities, but plants produced smaller and thicker leaves and had shorter stems and roots, probably imposed by the osmotic stress and lowered turgor pressure restricting cell expansion. Na+ concentrations in the plant tissue only increased three-fold, but uptake of K+ was reduced, resulting in very high Na+/K+ ratios at high salinities, indicating that S. natans lacks mechanisms to maintain ionic homeostasis in the cells. The contents of proline in the plant tissue increased at high salinity, but concentrations were very low (<0.1 μmol g−1 FW), indicating a limited capacity of S. natans to synthesize proline as a compatible compound. The potential photochemical efficiency of PSII (Fv/Fm) of S. natans remained unchanged at 50 mM NaCl but was reduced at higher salinities, and the photosynthetic capacity (ETRmax) was significantly reduced at 50 mM NaCl and higher. It is concluded that S. natans is a salt-sensitive species lacking physiological measures to cope with exposure to high NaCl salinity. At low salinities salts are taken up and accumulate in old leaves, and high growth rates are maintained because new leaves are produced at a higher rate than for plants not exposed to salt.  相似文献   

18.
Callus and suspension cultures adapted to various concentrations of NaCl or mannitol were developed from the cultivated potato Solanum tuberosum cv. Desire. Growth of the calli was less inhibited by mannitol than by iso-osmotic concentrations of NaCl. Reduction of growth by both NaCl and mannitol was considerably lower in osmotically adapted calli than in non-adapted ones. Salt-adapted suspension cultures that grew in the medium to which they had been originally adapted had a shorter lag in growth as well as a shorter time required to achieve the maximum growth, as compared with non-adapted cells. Suspension cultures adapted to NaCl concentrations higher than 150 mM were obtained only after preadaptation to osmotic stress. Adaptation of these cells was found to be stable. Accumulation of Na+ was lower and level of K+ was more stable in osmotically adapted than in non-adapted calli, when both were exposed to salt. Potassium level in NaCl-adapted calli exposed to saline medium was lower than that in non-adapted calli in standard medium. The maximum of Cl and Na+ accumulation was reached at higher external salt concentration in salt-adapted than in non-adapted suspension cultures. In both callus and suspension cultures, Cl accumulated more than Na+. Potassium level decreased more in non-adapted than in NaCl-adapted suspension cultures. The decrease of osmotic potential in osmotically adapted calli exposed to mannitol and in salt-adapted calli and suspension cultures exposed to salt was correlated to the increase of the external concentration. Such a correlation was not found in osmotically adapted calli exposed to salt. Non-electrolytes were found to be the main contributors to the decrease is osmotic potential in both callus and suspension cultures.  相似文献   

19.
M. Katsuhara  M. Tazawa 《Protoplasma》1986,135(2-3):155-161
Summary The mechanism of salt tolerance was studied using isolated internodal cells of the charophyteNitellopsis obtusa grown in fresh water. When 100 mM NaCl was added to artificial pond water (0.1 mM each of NaCl, KC1, CaCl2), no cell survived for more than one day. Within the first 30 minutes, membrane potential (Em) depolarized and membrane resistance (Rm) decreased markedly. Simultaneously, cytoplasmic Na+ increased and K+ decreased greatly. At steady state the increase in Na+ content was roughly equal to the decrease in K+ content. The Cl content of the cytoplasm did not change. These results suggest that Na+ enters the cytoplasm by exchange with cytoplasmic K+. Both the entry of Na+ and the exit of K+ are assumed to be passive and the latter being caused by membrane depolarization. Vacuolar K+, Na+, and Cl remained virtually constant, suggesting that rapid influx of Na+ from the cytoplasm did not occur.In 100 mM NaCl containing 10 mM CaCl2, membrane depolarization, membrane resistance decrease and changes in cytoplasmic [Na+] and [K+] did not occur, and cells survived for many days. When cells treated with 100 mM NaCl were transferred within 1 hour to 100 mM NaCl containing 10 mM CaCl2, Em decreased, Rm increased, cytoplasmic Na+ and K+ returned to their initial levels, and cells survived. Two possible mechanisms for the role of Ca2+ in salt tolerance inNitellopsis are discussed; one a reduction in plasmalemma permeability to Na+ and the other a stimulation of active Na+-extrusion.  相似文献   

20.
The halotolerant cyanobacterium Anabaena sp was grown under NaCl concentration of 0, 170 and 515 mM and physiological and proteomic analysis was performed. At 515 mM NaCl the cyanobacterium showed reduced photosynthetic activities and significant increase in soluble sugar content, proline and SOD activity. On the other hand Anabaena sp grown at 170 mM NaCl showed optimal growth, photosynthetic activities and comparatively low soluble sugar content, proline accumulation and SOD activity. The intracellular Na+ content of the cells increased both at 170 and 515 mM NaCl. In contrast, the K+ content of the cyanobacterium Anabaena sp remained stable in response to growth at identical concentration of NaCl. While cells grown at 170 mM NaCl showed highest intracellular K+/Na+ ratio, salinity level of 515 mM NaCl resulted in reduced ratio of K+/Na+. Proteomic analysis revealed 50 salt-responsive proteins in the cyanobacterium Anabaena sp under salt treatment compared with control. Ten protein spots were subjected to MALDI-TOF–MS/MS analysis and the identified proteins are involved in photosynthesis, protein folding, cell organization and energy metabolism. Differential expression of proteins related to photosynthesis, energy metabolism was observed in Anabaena sp grown at 170 mM NaCl. At 170 mM NaCl increased expression of photosynthesis related proteins and effective osmotic adjustment through increased antioxidant enzymes and modulation of intracellular ions contributed to better salinity tolerance and optimal growth. On the contrary, increased intracellular Na+ content coupled with down regulation of photosynthetic and energy related proteins resulted in reduced growth at 515 mM NaCl. Therefore reduced growth at 515 mM NaCl could be due to accumulation of Na+ ions and requirement to maintain higher organic osmolytes and antioxidants which is energy intensive. The results thus show that the basis of salt tolerance is different when the halotolerant cyanobacterium Anabaena sp is grown under low and high salinity levels.  相似文献   

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