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1.
Debaryomyces nepalensis NCYC 3413, a food spoiling yeast isolated from rotten apple, has been previously demonstrated as halotolerant yeast. In the present study, we assessed its growth, change in cell size, and measured the intracellular polyol and cations (Na+ or K+) accumulated during growth in the absence and presence of different concentrations of salts (NaCl and KCl). Cells could tolerate 2 M NaCl and KCl in defined medium. Scanning electron microscopic results showed linear decrease in mean cell diameter with increase in medium salinity. Cells accumulated high amounts of K+ during growth at high concentrations of KCl. However, it accumulated low amounts of Na+ and high amounts of K+ when grown in the presence of NaCl. Cells grown in the absence of salt showed rapid influx of Na+/K+ on incubation with high salt. On incubation with 2 M KCl, cells grown at 2 M NaCl showed an immediate efflux of Na+ and rapid uptake of K+ and vice versa. To withstand the salt stress, osmotic adjustment of intracellular cation was accompanied by intracellular accumulation of polyol (glycerol, arabitol, and sorbitol). Based on our result, we hypothesize that there exists a balanced efflux and synthesis of osmolytes when D. nepalensis was exposed to hypoosmotic and hyperosmotic stress conditions, respectively. Our findings suggest that D. nepalensis is an Na+ excluder yeast and it has an efficient transport system for sodium extrusion.  相似文献   

2.
3.
In this report, we consider the accumulation in roots, and transport to the shoot, of Na+ and K+ in intact lettuce plants (Lactuca sativa cv Black-seeded Simpson). Plants were grown in modified Hoagland medium supplemented with 10 moles NaCl per cubic meter. At this salinity, significant levels of Na+ were accumulated in roots and shoots, but there was no reduction in plant growth. Transport characteristics for both Na+ and K+ were qualitatively similar to those previously reported, for Spergularia marina, indicating that the results obtained with these experimental protocols are not limited to one unconventional experimental plant. The most pronounced difference in transport of the two ions was evident when transport was followed in a chase period after a 10 minute uptake pulse. For Na+, there was an initially rapid, but small, loss of label to the medium, and very little movement to the shoot. For K+, little label was lost from the plants, but translocation to the shoot proceeded for at least 60 minutes. The transport systems were further distinguished by treating the roots during labeling with 20 micrograms per milliliter cycloheximide. For K+, both uptake and translocation were reduced by about 50%. For Na+, root accumulation was stimulated more than five-fold, while transport to the shoot was reduced about 20%. Cycloheximide also modified the Na+ transport characteristics such that continued translocation occurred during the chase period of pulse-chase studies.  相似文献   

4.
Qualitative and quantitative composition of fatty acids (FA) in the lipids of vegetative organs of the halophyte Suaeda altissima (L.) Pall. grown at different NaCl concentrations in nutrient solution was studied. Along with this, the biomass of these organs, the content of water and Na+, Cl?, and K+ ions in them, and the ultrastructure of root and leaf cells were determined. At both low (1 mM) and high (750 mM) NaCl concentrations in nutrient solution, plants could maintain growth and water content in organs, demonstrating a noticeable increase in the dry weight and a slight increase in the water content at 250 mM NaCl. At all NaCl concentrations in nutrient solution, S. altissima tissues contained a relatively high K+ amount. Under salinity, Na+ and Cl? ions contributed substantially into the increase in the cell osmotic pressure, i.e., a decrease in their water potential; in the absence of salinity, K+ fulfilled this function. In the cells of both roots and leaves, NaCl stimulated endo- and exocytosis, supposedly involved in the vesicular compound transport. 750 mM NaCl induced plasmolysis and changes in the membrane structure, which can be interpreted as degradation processes. Under optimal NaCl concentration in medium (250 mM), the content of lipids in plant aboveground organs per fresh weight was more than 2.5-fold higher than under 1 or 750 mM NaCl, whereas in the roots opposite patten was observed. When plants were grown under non-optimal conditions, substantial changes occurred in the qualitative and quantitative FA composition in lipids of both aboveground organs and roots. Observed changes are discussed in relation to processes underlying S. altissima salt tolerance and those of disintegration occurring at the high external NaCl concentration (750 mM).  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
Atriplex (Halimione) portulacoides is a halophyte with potential interest for saline soil reclamation and phytoremediation. Here, we assess the impact of salinity reaching up to two-fold seawater concentration (0–1000 mM NaCl) on the plant growth, leaf water status and ion uptake and we evaluate the contribution of inorganic and organic solutes to the osmotic adjustment process. A. portulacoides growth was optimal at 200 mM NaCl but higher salinities (especially 800 and 1000 mM NaCl) significantly reduced plant growth. Na+ and Cl contents increased upon salt exposure especially in the leaves compared to the roots. Interestingly, no salt-induced toxicity symptoms were observed and leaf water content was maintained even at the highest salinity level. Furthermore, leaf succulence and high instantaneous water use efficiency (WUEi) under high salinity significantly contributed to maintain leaf water status of this species. Leaf pressure–volume curves showed that salt-challenged plants adjusted osmotically by lowering osmotic potential at full turgor (Ψπ100) along with a decrease in leaf cell elasticity (values of volumetric modulus elasticity (ε) increased). As a whole, our findings indicate that A. portulacoides is characterized by a high plasticity in terms of salt-response. Preserving leaf hydration and efficiently using Na+ for the osmotic adjustment especially at high salinities (800–1000 mM NaCl), likely through its compartmentalization in leaf vacuoles, are key determinants of such a performance. The selective absorption of K+ over Na+ in concomitance with an increase in the K+ use efficiency also accounted for the overall plant salt tolerance.  相似文献   

7.
Sorghum bicolor L. Moench, RS 610, was grown in liquid media salinized with NaCl, KCl, Na2SO4, K2SO4 or with variable mixtures of either NaCl/KCl or Na2SO4/K2SO4 at osmotic potentials ranging from 0 to -0.8 MPa. The purpose was to study the effects of different types and degrees of salinity in growth media on growth and solute accumulation. In 14-day-old plants the severity of leaf growth inhibition at any one level of osmotic potential in the medium increased according to the following order: NaCl < Na2SO4 < KCl = K2SO4. Inhibition of growth by mixtures of Na+ and K+ salts was the same as by K+ salts alone. Roots responded differently. Root growth was not affected by Na+ salts in the range of 0 to -0.2 MPa while it was stimulated by K+ salts. The major cation of leaves was K+ because S. bicolor is a Na+-excluder, while Na+ was the major cation in roots except at low Na+/K+ ratios in media. Anions increased in tissues linearly in relation to total monovalent cation, but not with a constant anion/cation ratio. This ratio increased as the cation concentrations in tissues increased. Sucrose in leaf tissue increased 75 fold in Chloride-plants (plants growing in media in which the only anion of the salinizing salts was Cl?) and 50 fold in Sulphate-plants (the only anion of the salinizing salts was SO42-). Proline increased 60 and 18 fold in Chloride- and Sulphate-plants, respectively, as growth media potentials decreased from 0 to -0.8 MPa. The concentrations of both sucrose and proline were directly proportional to the amount of total monovalent cation in the tissue. Sucrose concentrations began increasing when total monovalent cations exceeded 100 μmol (g fresh weight)?1 (the monovalent cation level in non-stressed plants), but proline did not start accumulating until monovalent cation concentrations exceeded 200 μmol (g fresh weight)?1. Therefore, sucrose seemed to be the solute used for osmotic adjustment under mild conditions of saline stress while proline was involved in osmotic adjustment under more severe conditions of stress. Concentrations of inorganic phosphate, glucose, fructose, total amino acids and malic acid fluctuated in both roots and leaves in patterns that could be somewhat correlated with saline stress and, sometimes, with particular salts in growth media. However, the changes measured were too small (at most a 2–3 fold increase) to be of importance in osmotic adjustment.  相似文献   

8.
To elucidate the osmotic adjustment characteristics of mangrove plants, inorganic ion and organic solute contents of intermediate leaves were investigated in 3-month-old Kandelia candel (L.) Druce seedlings during 45 days of NaCl treatments (0, 200, and 500 mM NaCl). The contents of Na+, Cl, total free amino acids, proline, total soluble sugars, pinitol and mannitol increased to different degree by salinity, whereas, K+ content decreased by salinity compared with control. NaCl treatment induced an increase of inorganic ion contribution while a decrease of organic solute contribution. It was concluded that accumulating a large amount of inorganic ions was used as the main osmotic adjustment mechanism under salinity treatment. However, accumulation of organic osmolytes might be considered to play much more important role in osmoregulation under severe salinity (500 mM NaCl) than under moderate salinity (200 mM NaCl), thus the damage caused by high toxic ions (Na+ and Cl) concentration in K. candel leaves could be avoided.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
Two morphological forms of wormwood Artemisia lerchiana (f. erecta and f. nutans) and A. pauciflora Web. (morphological form erecta) were grown on sand culture at a range of NaCl concentrations in the nutrient medium and then assayed for Na+, K+, and Cl? content in various organs. In addition, the content of mono-, di-, and trisaccharides and multiatomic alcohols (mannitol and glycerol); water content; and organ biomass were determined. All plants examined showed high NaCl tolerance, comparable to that of halophytes. They were able to maintain high tissue hydration under conditions of salinity-induced growth suppression. The intracellular osmotic pressure in wormwood organs was mainly determined by the presence of Na+, K+, and Cl?, as well as by mono-, di-, and trisaccharides, mannitol, and glycerol. The high content of Na+ and Cl? in wormwood organs was also observed in the absence of salinity, which implies the ability of these organs to absorb ions from diluted NaCl solutions and accumulate ions in cells of their tissues. With the increase in salinity, the content of Na+ and Cl? in roots and leaves increased to even higher levels. It is concluded that the ability of wormwood plants to absorb and accumulate inorganic ions provides for sustainable high intracellular osmotic pressure and, accordingly, low water potential under drought and salinity conditions. Growing plants under high salinity lowered the content of monosaccharides in parallel with accumulation of the trisaccharide raffinose. It is supposed that soluble carbohydrates and multiatomic alcohols are not only significant for osmoregulation but also perform a protective function in wormwood plants. The lower osmotic pressure in root cells compared to that in leaf cells of all plants examined was mainly due to the gradient distribution of K+ and Cl? between roots and leaves. The two Artemisia species and two morphological forms of A. lerchiana did not differ appreciably in the ways of water balance regulation. It is found that different morphologies of two A. lerchiana forms are unrelated to variations in intracellular osmotic and turgor pressures.  相似文献   

11.
Halophytes are potential gene sources for genetic manipulation of economically important crop species. This study addresses the physiological responses of a widespread halophyte, Prosopis strombulifera (Lam.) Benth to salinity. We hypothesised that increasing concentrations of the two major salts present in soils of central Argentina (Na2SO4, NaCl, or their iso‐osmotic mixture) would produce distinct physiological responses. We used hydroponically grown P. strombulifera to test this hypothesis, analysing growth parameters, water relations, photosynthetic pigments, cations and anions. These plants showed a halophytic response to NaCl, but strong general inhibition of growth in response to iso‐osmotic solutions containing Na2SO4. The explanation for the adaptive success of P. strombulifera in high NaCl conditions seems to be related to a delicate balance between Na + accumulation (and its use for osmotic adjustment) and efficient compartmentalisation in vacuoles, the ability of the whole plant to ensure sufficient K+ supply by maintaining high K + /Na + discrimination, and maintenance of normal Ca2 + levels in leaves. The three salt treatments had different effects on the accumulation of ions. Findings in bi‐saline‐treated plants were of particular interest, where most of the physiological parameters studied showed partial alleviation of SO42?‐induced toxicity by Cl?. Thus, discussions on physiological responses to salinity could be further expanded in a way that more closely mimics natural salt environments.  相似文献   

12.
Effects of iso-osmotic concentrations of NaCl and mannitol were studied in Mammilaria gracilis (Cactaceae) in both calli and tumors grown in vitro. In both tissues, relative growth rates were reduced under osmotic stress, which were accompanied by a decrease in both tissue water and K+ content. However, growth was inhibited to a lesser extent after exposure to NaCl, when accumulation of Na+ ions was observed. In calli, only salinity increased proline content, whereas with tumors proline accumulated after both osmotic stresses. Osmotic stresses also induced oxidative damage in both cactus tissues, although higher oxidative injury was caused by mannitol in calli and by salt in tumors. Low iso-osmotic concentrations of NaCl (75 mM) and mannitol (150 mM) increased peroxidase, ascorbate peroxidase, and esterase activities, whereas elevated catalase activity was recorded only after mannitol treatment in both tissues. High osmotic stress generally decreased enzymatic activities. However, in calli, esterase activity increased in response to high salinity, whereas ascorbate peroxidase activity was enhanced after high mannitol stress. In conclusion, both in vitro-grown cactus tissues were found to be sensitive to osmotic stress caused by either mannitol or NaCl, but accumulation of Na+ ions in response to salt somewhat contributed to osmotic adjustment. However, more prominent oxidative damage induced by NaCl compared to mannitol in tumor could be related to ion toxicity. The mechanisms that mediate responses to salt- and mannitol-induced osmotic stresses differed and were dependent on tissue type.  相似文献   

13.
Carrot cells (Daucus carota L.) in suspension culture exposed to medium containing 150 mM NaCl plasmolyzed immediately and deplasmolyzed within 35 to 40 hr. Three days after exposure to NaCl the cells resumed proliferation. Accommodation to salinity and renewal of growth was accompanied by absorption of Na+ from the external medium. On completion of deplasmolysis, K+ concentration in the cytosol doubled and Na+ concentration approximated that of K+. The vacuolar K+ concentration was practically unchanged while Na+ accumulated to a concentration double that of K+. Cl−- accumulation started later and eventually exceeded that of Na+ plus K+. Malate was redistributed during accommodation to salinity and eventually returned to its initial level. Amino acid content in the cytosol increased fivefold, while in the vacuole it remained unchanged. These results show that: 1) recovery from osmotic shock requires absorption of easily penetrating solute, mainly Na+; 2) distribution of solutes, absorbed or synthesized in cells exposed to salinity, is a dynamic process; 3) cells could grow and proliferate in high NaCl content in the cytosol; 4) red beet root cells grown in the presence of NaCl contain higher cytoplasmic Na+ than K+; and 5) during adjustment to salinity small spherical carrot cells survive the osmotic shock and do not show any detectable damage.  相似文献   

14.
The aim of this paper was to investigate whether Na+ accumulated in the vacuoles of barley roots can be replaced by K+, or else remain irreversibly trapped.Barley seedlings (Hordeum vulgare L. cv. Aramir) were grown for 2 days on nutrient solutions and then salinized over 24 h by a linear increase in NaCl concentration (50 mol · m−3). NaCl was replaced by an equimolar concentration of KCl and 1 day later the KCl concentration was gradually decreased over 23 hours. After this the plants were grown for 2 further days on basic nutrient solution. Plant material was harvested at each experimental step in order to measure plant growth and K+ and Na+ concentrations in vacuoles and tissues.The results from quantitated, energy dispersive X-ray analyses on frozen, hydrated vacuoles of the rhizodermls and 3 subsequent cortical cell rows, point to a proportional replacement of K+ by Na+ after NaCl stress. A replacement of Na+ by K+ was clearly found in the rhizodermal vacuoles after KCl treatment. Flame emission spectrometric data from corresponding root segments support these results.  相似文献   

15.
Bouzid Nedjimi 《Flora》2009,204(10):747-754
Lygeum spartum L. is a native species in Algerian salt steppes. The plant is of interest because of its tolerance to environmental stresses and its use as a fodder grass for livestock in low-rainfall Mediterranean areas. Nevertheless, plant responses of this plant to salt stress are still not investigated in detail. Therefore, L. spartum L. was grown in hydroponic conditions to investigate the effect of salinity (0, 30, 60 and 90 mM NaCl) on growth, water relations, gas exchange, leaf chlorophyll concentration, glycine betaine and mineral uptake. Plant growth was reduced at 60 and 90 mM NaCl, but was not significantly lower than in the controls at 30 mM NaCl. Sodium (Na+), chloride (Cl) and glycine betaine contents in plants increased, whereas calcium (Ca2+), potassium (K+), relative water content (RWC), root hydraulic conductivity (L0) and chlorophyll content decreased with an increase in salinity. Water potential (Ψω) and osmotic potential (Ψπ) of plants decreased with an increase in salinity. No change was observed in the turgor potential (Ψτ). Photosynthesis parameters (CO2 assimilation rate, stomatal conductance and transpiration rate) did not change significantly at 30 mM NaCl, as compared to the control. Higher salt levels impaired photosynthetic capacity of L. spartum mainly via a stomatal limitation leading to a low CO2 assimilation rate. This might be a consequence of the reduced whole-plant hydraulic conductivity under salt stress. The results demonstrated that L. spartum L. can be characterised as a moderately salt-tolerant species. Salt tolerance in this species is achieved by appropriate osmotic adjustment involving accumulation of ions and glycine betaine. At high salinities, growth reduction probably occurs as a result of high concentrations of Na+ and Cl and their interference with other ions such as Ca2+ and K+. This plant can be used locally as a fodder for livestock and to stabilise sand dunes and rehabilitate salt soils.  相似文献   

16.
White goosefoot plants (Chenopodium album L. of the family Chenopodiaceae) grown at various NaCl concentrations (3–350 mM) in the nutrient solution were used to study the cell ultrastructure as well as the qualitative and quantitative composition of fatty acids in the lipids of vegetative organs. In addition, the biomass of Ch. album vegetative organs, the water content, and the concentrations of K+, Na+, and Cl were determined. The growth rates of plants raised at NaCl concentrations up to 200–250 mM were the same as for the control plants grown at 3 mM NaCl; the growth parameters remained rather high even at NaCl concentrations of 300–350 mM. The water content in Ch. album organs remained high at all NaCl concentrations tested. Analysis of the ionic status of Ch. album revealed a comparatively high K+ content in plant organs. At low NaCl concentrations in the nutrient solution, K+ ions were the dominant contributors to the osmolarity (the total concentration of osmotically active substances) and, consequently, to the lowered cell water potential in leaves and roots. As the concentration of NaCl was increased, the plant organs accumulated larger amounts of Na+ and Cl, and the contribution of these ion species to osmolarity became increasingly noticeable. At 300–350 mM NaCl the contribution of Na+ and Cl to osmolarity was comparable to that of K+. An electron microscopy study of Ch. album cells revealed that, apart from the usual response to salinity manifested in typical ultrastructural changes of chloroplasts, mitochondria, and the cytosol, the salinity response comprised the enhanced formation of endocytic structures and exosomes and stimulation of autophagy. It is supposed that activation of these processes is related to the removal from the cytoplasm of toxic substances and the cell structures impaired by salt stress conditions. The qualitative and quantitative composition of fatty acids in the lipids of Ch. album organs was hardly affected by NaCl level. These findings are consistent with the high salt tolerance of Ch. album, manifested specifically in retention of growth functions under wide-range variations of NaCl concentration in the nutrient solution and in maintenance of K+, Na+, and Cl content in organs at a constant level characteristic of untreated plants.  相似文献   

17.
Mesophyll cells from leaves of cowpea (Vigna unquiculata [L.] Walp.) plants grown under saline conditions were isolated and used for the determination of photosynthetic CO2 fixation. Maximal CO2 fixation rate was obtained when the osmotic potential of both cell isolation and CO2 fixation assay media were close to leaf osmotic potential, yielding a zero turgor pressure. Hypotonic and hypertonic media decreased the rate of photosynthesis regardless of the salinity level during plant growth. No decrease in photosynthesis was obtained for NaCl concentrations up to 87 moles per cubic meter in the plant growing media and only a 30% decrease was found at 130 moles per cubic meter when the osmotic potential of cell isolation and CO2 fixation media were optimal. The inhibition was reversible when stress was relieved. At 173 moles per cubic meter NaCl, photosynthesis was severely and irreversibly inhibited. This inhibition was attributed to toxic effects caused by high Cl and Na+ accumulation in the leaves. Uptake of sorbitol by intact cells was insignificant, and therefore not associated with cell volume changes. The light response curve of cells from low salinity grown plants was similar to the controls. Cells from plants grown at 173 moles per cubic meter NaCl were light saturated at a lower radiant flux density than were cells from lower salinity levels.  相似文献   

18.
This study assessed the capacity of Jatropha curcas to physiologically adjust to salinity. Seedlings were exposed to increasing NaCl concentrations (25, 50, 75 and 100 mm ) for 15 days. Treatment without NaCl was adopted as control. Shoot dry weight was strongly reduced by NaCl, reaching values of 35% to 65% with 25 to 100 mm NaCl. The shoot/root ratio was only affected with 100 mm NaCl. Relative water content (RWC) increased only with 100 mm NaCl, while electrolyte leakage (EL) was much enhanced with 50 mm NaCl. The Na+ transport rate to the shoot was more affected with 50 and 100 mm NaCl. In parallel, Cl? transport rate increased with 75 and 100 mm NaCl, while K+ transport rate fell from 50 mm to 100 mm NaCl. In roots, Na+ and Cl? transport rates fell slightly only in 50 mm (to Na+) and 50 and 100 mm (to Cl?) NaCl, while K+ transport rate fell significantly with increasing NaCl. In general, our data demonstrate that J. curcas seedlings present changes in key physiological processes that allow this species to adjust to salinity. These responses are related to accumulation of Na+ and Cl? in leaves and roots, K+/Na+ homeostasis, transport of K+ and selectivity (K–Na) in roots, and accumulation of organic solutes contributing to osmotic adjustment of the species.  相似文献   

19.
Aim of the present study was to investigate the effects of two key environmental factors of estuarine ecosystems, salinity and hypoxia, on the physiological attributes in reed plants (Phragmites australis (Cav.) Trin. ex Steudel). Growth, leaf gas exchange, water (and ion) relations, and osmotic adjustment were determined in hydroponically grown plants exposed to hypoxia at varying NaCl-salinity concentrations (0, 50, 100, and 200 mM). Plants grew well under hypoxia treatment with standard nutrient solution without added salt and at NaCl concentrations up to 100 mM. Reed plants were able to produce and allocate phytomass to all their organs even at the highest salt level (200 mM NaCl). In plants subjected to hypoxia at various water potentials no clear relationships were found between growth and photosynthetic parameters except for gs, whereas growth displayed a highly significant correlation with plant–water relations. A and gs of reed plants treated with hypoxia at varying water potential of nutrient solutions were positively correlated and the former variable also had a strong positive relationship with E. Leaf Ψw and Ψπ followed a similar trend and declined significantly as water potential of watering solutions was lowered. Highly significant positive correlations were identified between leaf Ψw and photosynthetic parameters. At all NaCl concentrations, the increase in total inorganic ions resulted from increased Na+ and Cl while K+, Ca2+, and Mg2+ concentrations decreased with increasing osmolality of nutrient solutions. Common reed has an efficient mechanism of Na+ exclusion from the leaves and exhibited a high leaf K+/Na+ selectivity ratio over a wide range of salinities under hypoxia treatment. In Phragmites australis grown in 200 mM NaCl, K+ contributed 17% toΨπ, whereas Na+ and Cl accounted for only 11% and 6%, respectively. At the same NaCl concentration, the estimated contribution of proline to Ψπ was less than 0.2%. Changes in leaf turgor occurred with a combined effect of salinity and hypoxia, suggesting that reed plants could adjust their water status sufficiently.  相似文献   

20.
Control of xylem Na+ loading has often been named as the essential component of salinity tolerance mechanism. However, it is less clear to what extent the difference in this trait may determine differential salinity tolerance between species. In this study, barley (Hordeum vulgare L. cv. CM72) and rice (Oryza sativa L. cv. Dongjin) plants were grown under two levels of salinity. Na+ and K+ concentrations in the xylem sap, and shoot and root tissues were measured at different time points after stress onset. Salt‐exposed rice plants prevented xylem Na+ loading for several days, but failed to control this process in the longer term, ultimately resulting in a massive Na+ shoot loading. Barley plants quickly increased xylem Na+ concentration and its delivery to the shoot (most likely for the purpose of osmotic adjustment) but were able to reduce this process later on, keeping most of accumulated Na+ in the root, thus maintaining non‐toxic shoot Na+ level. Rice plants increased shoot K+ concentration, while barley plants maintained higher root K+ concentration. Control of xylem Na+ loading is remarkably different between rice and barley; this difference may differentiate the extent of the salinity tolerance between species. This trait should be investigated in more detail to be used in the breeding programs aimed to improve salinity tolerance in crops.  相似文献   

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