4.7 Article

Soybean CHX-type ion transport protein GmSALT3 confers leaf Na+ exclusion via a root derived mechanism, and Cl- exclusion via a shoot derived process

Journal

PLANT CELL AND ENVIRONMENT
Volume 44, Issue 3, Pages 856-869

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/pce.13947

Keywords

abiotic stress; CHX; ion transporter; salinity tolerance; shoot ion exclusion

Categories

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council [CE1400008, DE160100804, DE170100346, FT130100709]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31830066]
  3. Scientific Innovation Project of Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences
  4. Australian Research Council [DE170100346, DE160100804] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

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The study identified that GmSALT3 plays a significant role in salt tolerance by promoting net influx and accumulation of Na+, K+ and Cl- in plant cells. Grafting experiments demonstrated that shoot Cl- exclusion is dependent on the presence of GmSALT3 in shoots, revealing a novel mechanism for salt tolerance in plants.
Soybean (Glycine max) yields are threatened by multiple stresses including soil salinity. GmSALT3 (a cation-proton exchanger protein) confers net shoot exclusion for both Na+ and Cl- and improves salt tolerance of soybean; however, how the ER-localized GmSALT3 achieves this is unknown. Here, GmSALT3's function was investigated in heterologous systems and near isogenic lines that contained the full-length GmSALT3 (NIL-T; salt-tolerant) or a truncated transcript Gmsalt3 (NIL-S; salt-sensitive). GmSALT3 restored growth of K+-uptake-defective Escherichia coli and contributed towards net influx and accumulation of Na+, K+ and Cl- in Xenopus laevis oocytes, while Gmsalt3 was non-functional. Time-course analysis of NILs confirmed shoot Cl- exclusion occurs distinctly from Na+ exclusion. Grafting showed that shoot Na+ exclusion occurs via a root xylem-based mechanism; in contrast, NIL-T plants exhibited significantly greater Cl- content in both the stem xylem and phloem sap compared to NIL-S, indicating that shoot Cl- exclusion likely depends upon novel phloem-based Cl- recirculation. NIL-T shoots grafted on NIL-S roots contained low shoot Cl-, which confirmed that Cl- recirculation is dependent on the presence of GmSALT3 in shoots. Overall, these findings provide new insights on GmSALT3's impact on salinity tolerance and reveal a novel mechanism for shoot Cl- exclusion in plants.

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