Sodium accumulation contributes to salt stress tolerance in lettuce cultivars

Increasing soil salinity of irrigated agricultural areas represents a major environmental stress factor that impairs the production of many salt-sensitive crop plants. Different lettuce cultivars were studied for identification of more tolerant ones, based on physiological properties. Five selected...

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Main Authors: Csaba Bartha, Laszlo Fodorpataki, Maria del Carmen Martinez-Ballesta, Octavian Popescu, Micaela Carvajal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Julius Kühn-Institut 2015-03-01
Series:Journal of Applied Botany and Food Quality
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ojs.openagrar.de/index.php/JABFQ/article/view/3381
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spelling doaj-ed74d4d3491842438b0d4e6f71eec3652021-03-02T07:39:00ZengJulius Kühn-InstitutJournal of Applied Botany and Food Quality1613-92161439-040X2015-03-0188110.5073/JABFQ.2015.088.0083381Sodium accumulation contributes to salt stress tolerance in lettuce cultivarsCsaba Bartha0Laszlo Fodorpataki1Maria del Carmen Martinez-Ballesta2Octavian Popescu3Micaela Carvajal4Babes-Bolyai UniversityBabes-Bolyai UniversityCEBAS-CSIC (Centro de Edafologia y Biologia Aplicada del Segura )Babes-Bolyai UniversityCEBAS-CSIC (Centro de Edafologia y Biologia Aplicada del Segura ) Increasing soil salinity of irrigated agricultural areas represents a major environmental stress factor that impairs the production of many salt-sensitive crop plants. Different lettuce cultivars were studied for identification of more tolerant ones, based on physiological properties. Five selected lettuce cultivars were grown hydroponically, salt stress was induced by 50 mM and 100 mM of NaCl. The cultivars exhibited differential reduction in shoot fresh weight. The highest sodium and free proline accumulation in the shoot of the most tolerant cultivar, associated with a moderate decrease of the root hydraulic conductance and of the leaf stomatal conductance, can be related to a better defense mechanism against osmotic stress. Salt exposure increased the potassium and calcium ion content of the xylem sap, which may be important for an efficient osmotic adjustment needed to support leaf expansion. The fact that the highest amount of Na+ was found in the shoot of the most tolerant cultivar, and the lowest in the most sensitive one, reflects that in lettuce Na+ exclusion is not a main strategy for salt tolerance. Lettuce is a good example for the case in which salinity tolerance is related not to exclusion, but to inclusion of sodium ions in the shoot system. For salt tolerant varieties the marketable yield has a higher dry biomass percentage, leaves of plants grown under high salinity are crispier, darker green and have a slight salty taste. https://ojs.openagrar.de/index.php/JABFQ/article/view/3381hydraulic conductancestomatal conductancexylem sapprolineLactuca sativaosmotic stress
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Csaba Bartha
Laszlo Fodorpataki
Maria del Carmen Martinez-Ballesta
Octavian Popescu
Micaela Carvajal
spellingShingle Csaba Bartha
Laszlo Fodorpataki
Maria del Carmen Martinez-Ballesta
Octavian Popescu
Micaela Carvajal
Sodium accumulation contributes to salt stress tolerance in lettuce cultivars
Journal of Applied Botany and Food Quality
hydraulic conductance
stomatal conductance
xylem sap
proline
Lactuca sativa
osmotic stress
author_facet Csaba Bartha
Laszlo Fodorpataki
Maria del Carmen Martinez-Ballesta
Octavian Popescu
Micaela Carvajal
author_sort Csaba Bartha
title Sodium accumulation contributes to salt stress tolerance in lettuce cultivars
title_short Sodium accumulation contributes to salt stress tolerance in lettuce cultivars
title_full Sodium accumulation contributes to salt stress tolerance in lettuce cultivars
title_fullStr Sodium accumulation contributes to salt stress tolerance in lettuce cultivars
title_full_unstemmed Sodium accumulation contributes to salt stress tolerance in lettuce cultivars
title_sort sodium accumulation contributes to salt stress tolerance in lettuce cultivars
publisher Julius Kühn-Institut
series Journal of Applied Botany and Food Quality
issn 1613-9216
1439-040X
publishDate 2015-03-01
description Increasing soil salinity of irrigated agricultural areas represents a major environmental stress factor that impairs the production of many salt-sensitive crop plants. Different lettuce cultivars were studied for identification of more tolerant ones, based on physiological properties. Five selected lettuce cultivars were grown hydroponically, salt stress was induced by 50 mM and 100 mM of NaCl. The cultivars exhibited differential reduction in shoot fresh weight. The highest sodium and free proline accumulation in the shoot of the most tolerant cultivar, associated with a moderate decrease of the root hydraulic conductance and of the leaf stomatal conductance, can be related to a better defense mechanism against osmotic stress. Salt exposure increased the potassium and calcium ion content of the xylem sap, which may be important for an efficient osmotic adjustment needed to support leaf expansion. The fact that the highest amount of Na+ was found in the shoot of the most tolerant cultivar, and the lowest in the most sensitive one, reflects that in lettuce Na+ exclusion is not a main strategy for salt tolerance. Lettuce is a good example for the case in which salinity tolerance is related not to exclusion, but to inclusion of sodium ions in the shoot system. For salt tolerant varieties the marketable yield has a higher dry biomass percentage, leaves of plants grown under high salinity are crispier, darker green and have a slight salty taste.
topic hydraulic conductance
stomatal conductance
xylem sap
proline
Lactuca sativa
osmotic stress
url https://ojs.openagrar.de/index.php/JABFQ/article/view/3381
work_keys_str_mv AT csababartha sodiumaccumulationcontributestosaltstresstoleranceinlettucecultivars
AT laszlofodorpataki sodiumaccumulationcontributestosaltstresstoleranceinlettucecultivars
AT mariadelcarmenmartinezballesta sodiumaccumulationcontributestosaltstresstoleranceinlettucecultivars
AT octavianpopescu sodiumaccumulationcontributestosaltstresstoleranceinlettucecultivars
AT micaelacarvajal sodiumaccumulationcontributestosaltstresstoleranceinlettucecultivars
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