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Halophyte Improvement for a Salinized World
Authors:Cheng-Jiang Ruan  Jaime A. Teixeira da Silva  Susan Mopper  Pei Qin  Stanley Lutts
Affiliation:1. Key Laboratory of Biotechnology &2. Bio-Resources Utilization , Dalian Nationalities University , Dalian City, Liaoning, 116600, China;3. Faculty of Agriculture and Graduate School of Agriculture , Kagawa University , Miki-cho, Kagawa, 761-0795, Japan;4. Halophyte Research Lab, School of Life Sciences , Nanjing University , Nanjing, 210093, Jiangsu, China;5. Department of Biology , University of Louisiana , P.O. Box 42451, Lafayette, LA, 70504-2451, USA;6. Unité de Biologie végétale , Université Catholique de Louvain , 1348, Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium
Abstract:It is more important to improve the salt tolerance of crops in a salinized world with the situations of increasing populations, declining crop yields, and a decrease in agricultural lands. Attempts to produce salt-tolerant crops have involved the manipulation of existing crops through conventional breeding, genetic engineering and marker-assisted selection (MAS). However, these have, so far, not produced lines growing on highly saline water. Hence, the domestication of wild halophytes as crops appears to be a feasible way to develop agriculture in highly saline environments. In this review, at first, the assessment criteria of salt tolerance for halophytes are discussed. The traditional criteria for the classification of salinity in crops are less applicable to strong halophytes with cubic growth curves at higher salinities. Thus, realistic assessment criteria for halophytes should be evaluated at low and high salinity levels. Moreover, absolute growth rather than relative growth in fields during a crop's life cycle should be considered. Secondly, the use of metabolomics to understand the mechanisms by which halophytes respond to salt tolerance is highlighted as is the potential for metabolomics-assisted breeding of this group of plants. Metabolomics provides a better understanding of the changes in cellular metabolism induced by salt stress. Identification of metabolic quantitative trait loci (QTL) associated with salt tolerance might provide a new method to aid the selection of halophyte improvement. Thirdly, the identification of germplasm-regression-combined (GRC) marker-trait association and its potential to identifying markers associated with salt tolerance is outlined. Results of MAS/linkage map-QTL have been modest because of the absence of QTLs with tight linkage, the non-availability of mapping populations and the substantial time needed to develop such populations. To overcome these limitations, identification by GRC-based marker-trait association has been successfully applied to many plant traits, including salt tolerance. Finally, we provide a prospect on the challenges and opportunities for halophyte improvement, especially in the integration of metabolomics- and GRC-marker-assisted selection towards new or unstudied halophyte breeding, for which no other genetic information, such as linkage maps and QTL, are available.
Keywords:salt tolerance assessment  marker-assisted selection (MAS)  metabolomics  metabolic quantitative trait loci  germplasm-regression  marker-trait association
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