Back to Search
Start Over
A comparative study of salt tolerance parameters in 11 wild relatives of Arabidopsis thaliana
- Source :
- Journal of experimental botany 61 (2010): 3787–3798.. doi:10.1093/jxb/erq188, info:cnr-pdr/source/autori:Orsini F; Paino DUrzo M; Inan G; Serra S; Oh DH; Mickelbart MV; Consiglio F; Li X; Jeong JC; Yun DJ; Bohnert HJ; Bressan RA; Maggio A/titolo:A comparative study of salt tolerance parameters in 11 wild relatives of Arabidopsis thaliana/doi:10.1093%2Fjxb%2Ferq188/rivista:Journal of experimental botany/anno:2010/pagina_da:3787/pagina_a:3798./intervallo_pagine:3787–3798./volume:61, Journal of Experimental Botany
- Publication Year :
- 2010
- Publisher :
- Clarendon Press, Oxford , Regno Unito, 2010.
-
Abstract
- Salinity is an abiotic stress that limits both yield and the expansion of agricultural crops to new areas. In the last 20 years our basic understanding of the mechanisms underlying plant tolerance and adaptation to saline environments has greatly improved owing to active development of advanced tools in molecular, genomics, and bioinformatics analyses. However, the full potential of investigative power has not been fully exploited, because the use of halophytes as model systems in plant salt tolerance research is largely neglected. The recent introduction of halophytic Arabidopsis-Relative Model Species (ARMS) has begun to compare and relate several unique genetic resources to the well-developed Arabidopsis model. In a search for candidates to begin to understand, through genetic analyses, the biological bases of salt tolerance, 11 wild relatives of Arabidopsis thaliana were compared: Barbarea verna, Capsella bursa-pastoris, Hirschfeldia incana, Lepidium densiflorum, Malcolmia triloba, Lepidium virginicum, Descurainia pinnata, Sisymbrium officinale, Thellungiella parvula, Thellungiella salsuginea (previously T. halophila), and Thlaspi arvense. Among these species, highly salt-tolerant (L. densiflorum and L. virginicum) and moderately salt-tolerant (M. triloba and H. incana) species were identified. Only T. parvula revealed a true halophytic habitus, comparable to the better studied Thellungiella salsuginea. Major differences in growth, water transport properties, and ion accumulation are observed and discussed to describe the distinctive traits and physiological responses that can now be studied genetically in salt stress research.
- Subjects :
- Lepidium densiflorum
Physiology
stomata
Arabidopsis
Germination
Plant Science
Sodium Chloride
Plant Roots
Malcolmia
DIFFERENTIAL EXPRESSION
Lethal Dose 50
HEAVY-METALS
Halophyte
ABIOTIC STRESS
Botany
PLANT
Thlaspi arvense
ACCUMULATION
ion contents
THELLUNGIELLA-HALOPHILA
Water transport
biology
root elongation
halophytes
Sodium
Capsella
Salt Tolerance
biology.organism_classification
Research Papers
Hirschfeldia incana
Plant Leaves
Brassicaceae
Plant Stomata
Potassium
water relations
SALINITY STRESS
RESPONSES
Lepidium virginicum
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of experimental botany 61 (2010): 3787–3798.. doi:10.1093/jxb/erq188, info:cnr-pdr/source/autori:Orsini F; Paino DUrzo M; Inan G; Serra S; Oh DH; Mickelbart MV; Consiglio F; Li X; Jeong JC; Yun DJ; Bohnert HJ; Bressan RA; Maggio A/titolo:A comparative study of salt tolerance parameters in 11 wild relatives of Arabidopsis thaliana/doi:10.1093%2Fjxb%2Ferq188/rivista:Journal of experimental botany/anno:2010/pagina_da:3787/pagina_a:3798./intervallo_pagine:3787–3798./volume:61, Journal of Experimental Botany
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....4a2cb6d74eb6e3141e5e57e7bed59bb9
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1093/jxb/erq188