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HORT 301 – Plant Physiology December 3, 2007
Salinity HORT 301 – Plant Physiology December 3, 2007 Taiz and Zeiger, Chapter 26 (p ), Web Topics 26.5 & 26.6 Class Notes Salt stress – soil and water salinity Genetic variation for salt tolerance Salinity causes hyperosmotic stress and ionic disequilibrium NaCl uptake into roots and transport in plants Osmotic adjustment and ion compartmentalization Ion homeostasis transport proteins Salt stress signaling
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Salt stress - caused by concentrations greater than that required for optimum growth of a typical crop plant, 1500 ppm or 25 mM Na+ Sodic vs saline – synonyms for most plant biologists Oceans are the principal sources of salt - 99.991% of water on earth is in oceans, Na+ is 460 mM and Cl- is 540 mM NaCl is the primary cause of soil and water salinity, there are soils where Na2SO4 and CaCl2 constitute soil salinity
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Biogeochemical cycling of salt – water droplets containing salt (ocean) are carried by wind over land where these evaporate and deposit salt onto the soil and increase the salt content Flooding from oceans or estuaries - change in management of the neighboring estuary resulted in flooding of land used for rice production Courtesy of Tim Flowers Irrigation water quality and agricultural management practices – soils are irrigated with saline water and improperly leached resulting in salt accumulation, saline water infiltration into the ground water Inadequate management practices have led to the destruction of some very fertile soils, e.g., Fertile Crescent in Mesopotamia (Middle East)
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Salinity is considered to be the greatest constraint to sustainable irrigation
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Genetic variation for salt tolerance - glycophytes (sweet plants) are salt intolerant
Halophytes (salt plants) - “native flora in a saline environment” Widely distributed amongst angiosperms indicating polyphyletic (multiple progenitors) or halophytes are primitive genetic remnants of different families Halophytes exist in 1/3 of the angiosperm families, ½ of the 500 halophytic species belong to 20 families, monocots - 45 genera in the Poaceae family and dicots - 44% of the halophytic genera are in the Chenopodiaceae (e.g. Atriplex, Salicornia and Suaeda)
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Plant classifications based on salt stress tolerance
Halophytes – grow at 200 to 500 mM NaCl Euhalophytes (IA) - or facultative halophytes, genotypes that require salt for optimum growth; e.g. Suaeda maritima, Atriplex nummularia
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Miohalophytes (IB) - capable of growth at high salt but growth is inhibited by salt, e.g. Atriplex hastata, Spartina townsendii, sugar beet Halophytes and some glycophytes (II) - substantial growth reduction at 200 mM NaCl, crop plants like cotton, barley, tomato, common bean and soybean Very salt sensitive glycophytes (III) - e.g. fruit trees, avocado, stone fruits
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Salinity causes hyperosmotic stress (water deficit) and ionic disequilibrium (ion toxicity)
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Ion disequilibrium – Na+ rapidly enters the cell because the membrane potential is inside negative (~-120 to -200 mV), Na+ can accumulate to 102- to 103-fold greater concentration than in the apoplast, driven by the membrane potential Na+ is a cytotoxin and K+ is an essential nutrient High Na+ interferes with K+/Na+ selective uptake and K+ nutrition K+/Na+ selectivity is controlled by Ca2+, high Na+ disturbs K+ and Ca2+ availability
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Secondary effects of NaCl include:
Reduced cell expansion and assimilate production – similar to water deficit, adaptation includes a reduction in cell expansion rate that affects photosynthate production, i.e., yield decrease Carbon assimilation and photophosphorylation are salt sensitive – enzymes and membranes
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Decreased cytosolic metabolism – metabolic poisoning, enzymes of halophytes and glycophytes are equally sensitive to NaCl (halophyte) (glycophte) (halophyte) Production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) – products of photorespiration and mitochondrial respiration when electron flow is too great for electron acceptor molecules, e.g., NADPH, resulting in the production reactive oxygen species, lead to cell death
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NaCl uptake into roots and transport in plants - radial transport from the soil solution into roots is apoplastic/symplastic (epidermis and cortex), symplastic across the endodermis and then loaded into the xylem
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Radial transport is regulated - Na+ and Cl- transport to the xylem is limited by apoplastic to symplastic movement into epidermal, cortical and xylem parenchyma cells, endodermis (Casparian strip) restricts radial Na+ transport Salt movement through the xylem is determined by the transpirational flux – moves through the xylem to the shoot with water Plants minimize exposure of meristematic cells to Na+ and Cl- - the lack of vasculature to the meristem reduces transport to cells in this tissue, fully expanded leaves are ion sinks and may abscise Some halophytes deposit salt on the surface of leaves (sink) via glands or bladders
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Osmotic adjustment and ion compartmentalization - cellular level response to water deficit is osmotic adjustment (water status adaptation) Osmotic adjustment – mediated by accumulation and compartmentalization of Na+ and Cl- into the vacuole, compatible osmolytes are accumulated in the cytosol K+ Plasma Membrane polyols proline betaine trehalose ectoine DMSP Na+ Cl- Ca2+ Tonoplast OH-*-scavenging perox cp mt Na+/H+ H+ H2O pH 5.5 pH 7.5 -120 to mV +20 to +50 mV K+(Na+) PPi ATP Inositol NaCl↑
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Cell expansion during growth – volume increases 10- to 100-fold as cells develop to maturity, due mostly to an increase in the vacuole size, i.e., water uptake into the vacuole drives cell expansion Vacuolar compartmentalization of Na+ and Cl- facilitates cell expansion and prevents metabolic poisoning of the cytosol and organelles Osmolytes mediate osmotic adjustment in the cytosol or organelles
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Ion homeostasis transport proteins - coordinate net Na+ and Cl- uptake across the plasma membrane with the capacity to compartmentalize these ions into the vacuole, i.e., cytosolic Na+ and Cl- concentrations in the cytosol are maintained below toxic levels Plasma membrane: Na+ influx is passive (nonselective cation channel(s)) (NSCC), HKT1 transport system, and leak through K+ uptake systems because of the inside negative potential across the plasma membrane Cl- uptake is active (because of the inside negative potential across the plasma membrane) presumably a Cl- - H+ symporter
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Plasma membrane Na+ efflux is active, H+ driven Na+ antiporter SOS1, H+ gradient is established by the plasma membrane (P-type) H+-ATPase, note ∆pH Tonoplast - transport into the vacuole: Transport into the vacuole is through a H+ driven Na+ antiporter, NHX family H+ gradient established by tonoplast ATPase and/or pyrophosphatase
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Salt stress signaling – regulates Na+ ion homeostasis
Na+ (high concentrations) induces Ca2+ transients that regulate the SOS signal pathway [Na+]ext↑ → [Ca2+]cyt↑ → SOS3 → SOS2 → SOS1 SOS3 - Ca2+ binding protein, SOS2 - kinase, SOS1 - H+ driven Na+ antiporter Negative regulation: AtHKT1 Regulation of ion homeostasis by the SOS signal transduct ion pathway [Ca2+]ext blocks Na+ uptake through NSCC
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SOS3-SOS2 complex phosphorylates SOS1 to activate its Na+/H+ antiporter activity
SOS3-SOS2 complex induces the expression of SOS1 through some yet unknown transcription factor SOS pathway regulates AtNHX family antiporters at the post- transcriptional level The activated SOS pathway and outputs of the pathway are targets for bioengineering of salt tolerance by constitutive activation of the pathway Ectopic expression of ion homeostasis determinants
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