4.6 Article

Differential responses of roots for varying tolerance to salinity stress in wheat with special reference to elasticity

Journal

PLANT GROWTH REGULATION
Volume 94, Issue 2, Pages 183-193

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10725-021-00707-7

Keywords

Root elongation; Cell wall loosening; Apical root; Creep; Cultivar difference; Salt stress

Categories

Funding

  1. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science [26450020]
  2. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [26450020] Funding Source: KAKEN

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In salt-sensitive wheat cultivars, the elasticity of the root cell wall significantly decreased under salinity stress, while the elasticity was maintained in salt-tolerant cultivars. Root extension was largely dependent on elastic extension, and changes in chemical composition of the cell wall corresponded with cell wall extensibility and root growth in wheat cultivars with different degrees of salt tolerance.
Two salt-sensitive (Yongliang-15, GS-6058) and two salt-tolerant (JS-7, Xinchun-31) wheat cultivars were used to investigate the extension, extensibility (viscoelastic parameters), and chemical composition of the cell walls in their root elongation regions (apical 10 mm-long root segments), under salinity stress. The elasticity of the root cell wall, indicated by E-0, significantly decreased in the salt-sensitive cultivars, whereas the E-0 in the salt-tolerant cultivars was maintained at the same level as that in the non-saline condition. Root extension and the differences among cultivars were largely dependent on elastic extension, which accounts for one-half to two-thirds of the total extension. Viscosity, indicated by eta(0), and the plastic extension of the root cell walls did not change across the treatments and cultivars. The significant decrease in cell wall elasticity in the root elongation region was one of the factors that depressed root growth in salt-sensitive cultivars under the saline condition. The well-maintained elasticity of salt-tolerant cultivars alleviated the depression of root growth by NaCl. Cell wall elasticity was positively correlated with the relative pectin and hemicellulose I contents and negatively correlated with the relative cellulose content. Under saline conditions, the relative hemicellulose II content did not change in the salt-sensitive cultivars; however, it decreased in the salt-tolerant ones. Thus, changes in chemical composition of the cell wall were correspond with the cell wall extensibility and root growth in wheat cultivars with different degrees of salt tolerance.

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