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Changes in growth and water-soluble solute concentrations in Sorghum bicolor stressed with sodium and potassium salts
Authors:Ralph Weimberg  H. R. Lerner  A. Poljakoff-Mayber
Affiliation:U.S. Salinity Lab., Agricultural Research Service, USDA, 4500 Glenwood Drive, Riverside, CA 92501, U.S.A.;Dept of Botany, The Hebrew Univ. of Jerusalem, 91904 Jerusalem, Israel.
Abstract: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.
Keywords:Osmotic adjustment    salt-stress    solutes
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