Shuaijun Zhuang, Zhaoyou Yu, Jiayuan Li, Fan Wang, Chunxia Zhang
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Soil salinization has become a global problem and high salt concentration in soil negatively affects plant growth. In our previous study, we found that overexpression of PsAMT1.2 from Populus simonii could improve the salt tolerance of poplar, but the physiological and molecular mechanism was not well understood. To explore the regulation pathway of PsAMT1.2 in salt tolerance, we investigated the morphological, physiological and transcriptome differences between the PsAMT1.2 overexpression transgenic poplar and the wild type under salt stress. The PsAMT1.2 overexpression transgenic poplar showed better growth with increased net photosynthetic rate and higher chlorophyll content compared with wild type under salt stress. The overexpression of PsAMT1.2 increased the catalase, superoxide dismutase, peroxidase and ascorbate peroxidase activities, and therefore probably enhanced the reactive oxygen species clearance ability, which also reduced the degree of membrane lipid peroxidation under salt stress. Meanwhile, the PsAMT1.2 overexpression transgenic poplar maintained a relatively high K+/Na+ ratio under salt stress. RNA-seq analysis indicated that PsAMT1.2 might improve plant salt tolerance by regulating pathways related to the photosynthetic system, chloroplast structure, antioxidant activity and anion transport. Among the 1056 differentially expressed genes, genes related to photosystem I and photosystem II were up-regulated and genes related to chloride channel protein-related were down-regulated. The result of the present study would provide new insight into regulation mechanism of PsAMT1.2 in improving salt tolerance of poplar.
期刊介绍:
Tree Physiology promotes research in a framework of hierarchically organized systems, measuring insight by the ability to link adjacent layers: thus, investigated tree physiology phenomenon should seek mechanistic explanation in finer-scale phenomena as well as seek significance in larger scale phenomena (Passioura 1979). A phenomenon not linked downscale is merely descriptive; an observation not linked upscale, might be trivial. Physiologists often refer qualitatively to processes at finer or coarser scale than the scale of their observation, and studies formally directed at three, or even two adjacent scales are rare. To emphasize the importance of relating mechanisms to coarser scale function, Tree Physiology will highlight papers doing so particularly well as feature papers.