4.7 Article

Differential tolerance to combined salinity and O2 deficiency in the halophytic grasses Puccinellia ciliata and Thinopyrum ponticum: The importance of K+ retention in roots

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL AND EXPERIMENTAL BOTANY
Volume 87, Issue -, Pages 69-78

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envexpbot.2012.09.006

Keywords

Adventitious roots; Halophytes; Membrane potential; Potassium; Sodium; Waterlogging

Funding

  1. WA State Centre of Excellence in Ecohydrology
  2. University of Western Australia (UWA) Faculty of Natural and Agricultural Sciences Pump Priming Grant
  3. Department of Food and Agriculture
  4. UWA
  5. Australian Research Council [DP1094663, LP100200456]
  6. Spanish government [BES-2008-005096]
  7. Australian Research Council [DP1094663, LP100200456] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

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Saline environments of terrestrial halophytes are often prone to waterlogging, yet the effects on halophytes of combined salinity and waterlogging have rarely been studied. Either salinity or hypoxia (low O-2) alone can interfere with K+ homeostasis, therefore the combination of salinity or hypoxia is expected to impact significantly on K+ retention in roots. We studied mechanisms of tolerance to the interaction of salinity with hypoxia in Puccinellia ciliate and Thinopyrum ponticum, halophytic grasses that differ in waterlogging tolerance. Plants were exposed to aerated and stagnant saline (250 mM NaCl) treatments with low (0.25 mM) and high (4 mM) K+ levels; growth, net ion fluxes and tissue ion concentrations were determined. P. ciliate was more tolerant than T. ponticum to stagnant-saline treatment, producing twice the biomass of adventitious roots, which accumulated high levels of Na+, and had lower shoot Na+. After 24 h of saline hypoxic treatment, MIFE measurements revealed a net uptake of K+ (similar to 40 nmol m(-2) s(-1)) for P. ciliate, but a net loss of K+ (similar to 20 nmol m(-2) s(-1)) for the more waterlogging sensitive T. ponticum. NaCl alone induced K+ efflux from roots of both species, with channel blocker tests implicating GORK-like channels. P. ciliate had constitutively a more negative root cell membrane potential than T. ponticum (-150 versus -115 mV). Tolerance to salinity and hypoxia in P. ciliate is related to increased production of adventitious roots, regulation of shoot K+/Na+, and a superior ability to maintain negative membrane potential in root cells, resulting in greater retention of K+. (C) 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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