| Literature DB >> 28558173 |
Ali Kiani-Pouya1, Ute Roessner2,3, Nirupama S Jayasinghe3, Adrian Lutz3, Thusitha Rupasinghe3, Nadia Bazihizina1,4, Jennifer Bohm1,5, Sulaiman Alharbi6, Rainer Hedrich5, Sergey Shabala1.
Abstract
Epidermal bladder cells (EBCs) have been postulated to assist halophytes in coping with saline environments. However, little direct supporting evidence is available. Here, Chenopodium quinoa plants were grown under saline conditions for 5 weeks. One day prior to salinity treatment, EBCs from all leaves and petioles were gently removed by using a soft cosmetic brush and physiological, ionic and metabolic changes in brushed and non-brushed leaves were compared. Gentle removal of EBC neither initiated wound metabolism nor affected the physiology and biochemistry of control-grown plants but did have a pronounced effect on salt-grown plants, resulting in a salt-sensitive phenotype. Of 91 detected metabolites, more than half were significantly affected by salinity. Removal of EBC dramatically modified these metabolic changes, with the biggest differences reported for gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA), proline, sucrose and inositol, affecting ion transport across cellular membranes (as shown in electrophysiological experiments). This work provides the first direct evidence for a role of EBC in salt tolerance in halophytes and attributes this to (1) a key role of EBC as a salt dump for external sequestration of sodium; (2) improved K+ retention in leaf mesophyll and (3) EBC as a storage space for several metabolites known to modulate plant ionic relations.Entities:
Keywords: epidermal bladder cells; halophyte; metabolic profile; sodium sequestration
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28558173 DOI: 10.1111/pce.12995
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plant Cell Environ ISSN: 0140-7791 Impact factor: 7.228