Mechanisms and cellular strategies of salinity tolerance (NaCl) in plants

被引:0
|
作者
Hanana M. [1 ]
Hamrouni L. [2 ]
Cagnac O. [3 ]
Blumwald E. [4 ]
机构
[1] Centre de Biotechnologie de Borj-Cédria, Hammam-lif 2050
[2] Laboratoire d'Écophysiologie et d'Amélioration Sylvo-pastorale, Institut National de la Recherche en Génie Rural, Eau et Forêts (INRGREF), Ariana 2080, rue Hédi Karray
[3] Department of Biochemistry, Cellular and Molecular Biology, Plants of the Estacion Experimental Del Zaidin, Granada
[4] Department of Plant Sciences, University of California, Davis, CA 95616
关键词
Ion homeostasis; Osmoregulation; Salinity tolerance; Sodium exclusion; Stress cellular signalization; Vacuolar compartmentation;
D O I
10.1139/a11-003
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The problem of salinity is multiple. In addition to salt stress, ion toxicity (Na+ and Cl- dissolved in irrigation water or in soil solution), and mineral nutrition perturbation, plants have difficulty absorbing water from soil because of its elevated osmotic pressure, which leads to water stress and thus complicates and impairs their physiological state in an exponential way. Consequently, cells try to adjust their water potential by ion homeostasis regulation via vacuolar compartmentation and (or) extrusion out of the cell of the toxic ions (Na+ and Cl-). Nevertheless, if this is not sufficient, the plant has to use another way to face salt stress, which consists in the synthesis and accumulation of a class of osmoprotective compounds known as compatible solutes, mainly amino compounds and sugars. Energetically, this osmotic strategy is more expensive than ion homeostasis regulation. A secondary aspect of salinity stress in plants is the stress-induced production of reactive oxygen species leading to an oxidative stress whose damage reduction could be realized via the production of antioxidants. Perception and signal mechanisms represent the first events of plant stress adaptation, and the main pathways followed are calcium, abscissic acid (ABA), mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKinases), salt overly sensitive (SOS) proteins, and ethylene. © 2011 Published by NRC Research Press.
引用
收藏
页码:121 / 140
页数:19
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Mechanisms and strategies of cellular tolerance to salinity (NaCl) in plants
    Hanana, Mohsen
    Hamrouni, Lamia
    Cagnac, Olivier
    Blumwald, Eduardo
    ENVIRONMENTAL REVIEWS, 2011, 19 : 121 - 140
  • [2] CELLULAR MECHANISMS OF SALINITY TOLERANCE
    HASEGAWA, PM
    BRESSAN, RA
    HANDA, AK
    HORTSCIENCE, 1986, 21 (06) : 1317 - 1324
  • [3] MECHANISMS OF SALINITY TOLERANCE IN PLANTS
    CHEESEMAN, JM
    PLANT PHYSIOLOGY, 1988, 87 (03) : 547 - 550
  • [4] Cellular basis of salinity tolerance in plants
    Mansour, MMF
    Salama, KHA
    ENVIRONMENTAL AND EXPERIMENTAL BOTANY, 2004, 52 (02) : 113 - 122
  • [5] Mechanisms of high salinity tolerance in plants
    Tuteja, Narendra
    OSMOSENSING AND OSMOSIGNALING, 2007, 428 : 419 - +
  • [6] Salinity survival: molecular mechanisms and adaptive strategies in plants
    Zhang, Huankai
    Yu, Caiyu
    Zhang, Qian
    Qiu, Zihan
    Zhang, Xiansheng
    Hou, Yifeng
    Zang, Jie
    FRONTIERS IN PLANT SCIENCE, 2025, 16
  • [7] Enhanced tolerance to salinity following cellular acclimation to increasing NaCl levels in Medicagotruncatula
    Adel M. Elmaghrabi
    Sergio Ochatt
    Hilary J. Rogers
    Dennis Francis
    Plant Cell, Tissue and Organ Culture (PCTOC), 2013, 114 : 61 - 70
  • [8] Effect of salinity stress on plants and its tolerance strategies: a review
    Parul Parihar
    Samiksha Singh
    Rachana Singh
    Vijay Pratap Singh
    Sheo Mohan Prasad
    Environmental Science and Pollution Research, 2015, 22 : 4056 - 4075
  • [9] Effect of salinity stress on plants and its tolerance strategies: a review
    Parihar, Parul
    Singh, Samiksha
    Singh, Rachana
    Singh, Vijay Pratap
    Prasad, Sheo Mohan
    ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH, 2015, 22 (06) : 4056 - 4075
  • [10] The tolerance of plants for NaCl
    Lipman, CB
    Davis, AR
    West, ES
    SOIL SCIENCE, 1926, 22 (04) : 303 - 322