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Screening plants for salt tolerance by measuring K+ flux: a case study for barley
journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-16, 16:27 authored by Chen, Z, Ian NewmanIan Newman, Meixue ZhouMeixue Zhou, Neville MendhamNeville Mendham, Zhang, G, Sergey ShabalaSergey ShabalaDevelopment of salt-tolerant genotypes is central both to remediation of salinity-affected land and to meet increasing global food demand, which has been driving expansion of cropping into marginal areas. The bottleneck of any breeding programme is the lack of a reliable screening technique. This study tested the hypothesis that the ability of plants to retain K + under saline conditions is central to their salt tolerance. Using seven barley cultivars contrasting in salt tolerance (CM72, Numar, ZUG293, ZUG95, Franklin, Gairdner, ZUG403), a comprehensive study was undertaken of whole-plant (growth rate, biomass, net CO 2 assimilation, chlorophyll fluorescence, root and leaf elemental and water content) and cellular (net fluxes of H +, K +, Na + and Ca 2+) responses to various concentrations of NaCl (20-320 mM). Na + selective microelectrodes were found to be unsuitable for screening purposes because of non-ideal selectivity of the commercially available Na + LIX. At the same time, our results show very strong negative correlation between the magnitude of K + efflux from the root and salt tolerance of a particular cultivar. K + efflux from the mature root zone of intact 3-day-old seedlings following 40 min pretreatment with 80 mM NaCl was found to be a reliable screening indicator for salinity tolerance in barley. As a faster and more cost-effective alternative to microelectrode measurements, a procedure was developed enabling rapid screening of large numbers of seedlings, based on amount of K + leaked from plant roots after exposure to NaCl. © 2005 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.
History
Publication title
Plant, Cell and EnvironmentVolume
28Issue
10Pagination
1230-1246ISSN
0140-7791Department/School
Tasmanian Institute of Agriculture (TIA)Publisher
Blackwell Publishing LtdPlace of publication
United KingdomRepository Status
- Restricted