4.7 Article

Acclimation of the crucifer Eutrema salsugineum to phosphate limitation is associated with constitutively high expression of phosphate-starvation genes

Journal

PLANT CELL AND ENVIRONMENT
Volume 39, Issue 8, Pages 1818-1834

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/pce.12750

Keywords

Arabidopsis thaliana; Thellungiella salsuginea; absolute RT-qPCR; extremophile; halophyte; phosphate transporter; phosphorus; stress tolerance

Categories

Funding

  1. Ontario Research Fund-Research Excellence
  2. Canada Foundation for Innovation-Leaders of the Future
  3. Sigma-Aldrich Canada, Ltd.
  4. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada-Discovery Grant

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Eutrema salsugineum, a halophytic relative of Arabidopsis thaliana, was subjected to varying phosphate (Pi) treatments. Arabidopsis seedlings grown on 0.05mM Pi displayed shortened primary roots, higher lateral root density and reduced shoot biomass allocation relative to those on 0.5mM Pi, whereas Eutrema seedlings showed no difference in lateral root density and shoot biomass allocation. While a low Fe concentration mitigated the Pi deficiency response for Arabidopsis, Eutrema root architecture was unaltered, but adding NaCl increased Eutrema lateral root density almost 2-fold. Eutrema and Arabidopsis plants grown on soil without added Pi for 4 weeks had low shoot and root Pi content. Pi-deprived, soil-grown Arabidopsis plants were stunted with senescing older leaves, whereas Eutrema plants were visually indistinguishable from 2.5mM Pi-supplemented plants. Genes associated with Pi starvation were analysed by RT-qPCR. EsIPS2, EsPHT1; 4 and EsPAP17 showed up-regulated expression in Pi-deprived Eutrema plants, while EsPHR1, EsWRKY75 and EsRNS1 showed no induction. Absolute quantification of transcripts indicated that PHR1, WRKY75 and RNS1 were expressed at higher levels in Eutrema plants relative to those in Arabidopsis regardless of external Pi. The low phenotypic plasticity Eutrema displays to Pi supply is consistent with adaptation to chronic Pi deprivation in its extreme natural habitat.

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