Potassium Retention under Salt Stress Is Associated with Natural Variation in Salinity Tolerance among Arabidopsis Accessions.

Plants are exposed to various environmental stresses during their life cycle such as salt, drought and cold. Natural variation mediated plant growth adaptation has been employed as an effective approach in response to the diverse environmental cues such as salt stress. However, the molecular mechani...

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Main Authors: Yanling Sun, Xiangpei Kong, Cuiling Li, Yongxiu Liu, Zhaojun Ding
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0124032
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spelling doaj-1857de23a9564e83af4d426a385e6b352021-03-03T20:04:23ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-01105e012403210.1371/journal.pone.0124032Potassium Retention under Salt Stress Is Associated with Natural Variation in Salinity Tolerance among Arabidopsis Accessions.Yanling SunXiangpei KongCuiling LiYongxiu LiuZhaojun DingPlants are exposed to various environmental stresses during their life cycle such as salt, drought and cold. Natural variation mediated plant growth adaptation has been employed as an effective approach in response to the diverse environmental cues such as salt stress. However, the molecular mechanism underlying this process is not well understood. In the present study, a collection of 82 Arabidopsis thaliana accessions (ecotypes) was screened with a view to identify variation for salinity tolerance. Seven accessions showed a higher level of tolerance than Col-0. The young seedlings of the tolerant accessions demonstrated a higher K(+) content and a lower Na(+)/K(+) ratio when exposed to salinity stress, but its Na(+) content was the same as that of Col-0. The K(+) transporter genes AtHAK5, AtCHX17 and AtKUP1 were up-regulated significantly in almost all the tolerant accessions, even in the absence of salinity stress. There was little genetic variation or positive transcriptional variation between the selections and Col-0 with respect to Na+-related transporter genes, as AtSOS genes, AtNHX1 and AtHKT1;1. In addition, under salinity stress, these selections accumulated higher compatible solutes and lower reactive oxygen species than did Col-0. Taken together, our results showed that natural variation in salinity tolerance of Arabidopsis seems to have been achieved by the strong capacity of K(+) retention.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0124032
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yanling Sun
Xiangpei Kong
Cuiling Li
Yongxiu Liu
Zhaojun Ding
spellingShingle Yanling Sun
Xiangpei Kong
Cuiling Li
Yongxiu Liu
Zhaojun Ding
Potassium Retention under Salt Stress Is Associated with Natural Variation in Salinity Tolerance among Arabidopsis Accessions.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Yanling Sun
Xiangpei Kong
Cuiling Li
Yongxiu Liu
Zhaojun Ding
author_sort Yanling Sun
title Potassium Retention under Salt Stress Is Associated with Natural Variation in Salinity Tolerance among Arabidopsis Accessions.
title_short Potassium Retention under Salt Stress Is Associated with Natural Variation in Salinity Tolerance among Arabidopsis Accessions.
title_full Potassium Retention under Salt Stress Is Associated with Natural Variation in Salinity Tolerance among Arabidopsis Accessions.
title_fullStr Potassium Retention under Salt Stress Is Associated with Natural Variation in Salinity Tolerance among Arabidopsis Accessions.
title_full_unstemmed Potassium Retention under Salt Stress Is Associated with Natural Variation in Salinity Tolerance among Arabidopsis Accessions.
title_sort potassium retention under salt stress is associated with natural variation in salinity tolerance among arabidopsis accessions.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2015-01-01
description Plants are exposed to various environmental stresses during their life cycle such as salt, drought and cold. Natural variation mediated plant growth adaptation has been employed as an effective approach in response to the diverse environmental cues such as salt stress. However, the molecular mechanism underlying this process is not well understood. In the present study, a collection of 82 Arabidopsis thaliana accessions (ecotypes) was screened with a view to identify variation for salinity tolerance. Seven accessions showed a higher level of tolerance than Col-0. The young seedlings of the tolerant accessions demonstrated a higher K(+) content and a lower Na(+)/K(+) ratio when exposed to salinity stress, but its Na(+) content was the same as that of Col-0. The K(+) transporter genes AtHAK5, AtCHX17 and AtKUP1 were up-regulated significantly in almost all the tolerant accessions, even in the absence of salinity stress. There was little genetic variation or positive transcriptional variation between the selections and Col-0 with respect to Na+-related transporter genes, as AtSOS genes, AtNHX1 and AtHKT1;1. In addition, under salinity stress, these selections accumulated higher compatible solutes and lower reactive oxygen species than did Col-0. Taken together, our results showed that natural variation in salinity tolerance of Arabidopsis seems to have been achieved by the strong capacity of K(+) retention.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0124032
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AT xiangpeikong potassiumretentionundersaltstressisassociatedwithnaturalvariationinsalinitytoleranceamongarabidopsisaccessions
AT cuilingli potassiumretentionundersaltstressisassociatedwithnaturalvariationinsalinitytoleranceamongarabidopsisaccessions
AT yongxiuliu potassiumretentionundersaltstressisassociatedwithnaturalvariationinsalinitytoleranceamongarabidopsisaccessions
AT zhaojunding potassiumretentionundersaltstressisassociatedwithnaturalvariationinsalinitytoleranceamongarabidopsisaccessions
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