New Insights on plant salt tolerance mechanisms and their potential use for breeding
Soil salinization is a major threat to agriculture in arid and semi-arid regions, where water scarcity and inadequate drainage of irrigated lands severely reduce crop yield. Salt accumulation inhibits plant growth and reduces the ability to uptake water and nutrients, leading to osmotic or water-def...
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doaj-2413bbf7152041b4ba40588226fae6cf2020-11-25T00:01:24ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Plant Science1664-462X2016-11-01710.3389/fpls.2016.01787209523New Insights on plant salt tolerance mechanisms and their potential use for breedingMoez HANIN0Moez HANIN1Chantal Ebel2Chantal Ebel3Mariama Ngom4Mariama Ngom5Laurent Laplaze6Laurent Laplaze7Khaled Masmoudi8Centre de Biotechnologie de Sfax (CBS)Institut Supérieur de BiotechnologieCentre de Biotechnologie de Sfax (CBS)Institut Supérieur de BiotechnologieLaboratoire mixte international Adaptation des Plantes et microorganismes associés aux Stress Environnementaux (LAPSE)Laboratoire Commun de Microbiologie IRD/ISRA/UCADLaboratoire mixte international Adaptation des Plantes et microorganismes associés aux Stress Environnementaux (LAPSE)Institut de Recherche pour le développement (IRD),International center for biosaline agriculture (ICBA)Soil salinization is a major threat to agriculture in arid and semi-arid regions, where water scarcity and inadequate drainage of irrigated lands severely reduce crop yield. Salt accumulation inhibits plant growth and reduces the ability to uptake water and nutrients, leading to osmotic or water-deficit stress. Salt is also causing injury of the young photosynthetic leaves and acceleration of their senescence, as the Na+ cation is toxic when accumulating in cell cytosol resulting in ionic imbalance and toxicity of transpiring leaves. To cope with salt stress, plants have evolved mainly two types of tolerance mechanisms based on either limiting the entry of salt by the roots, or controlling its concentration and distribution. Understanding the overall control of Na+ accumulation and functional studies of genes involved in transport processes, will provide a new opportunity to improve the salinity tolerance of plants relevant to food security in arid regions. A better understanding of these tolerance mechanisms can be used to breed crops with improved yield performance under salinity stress. Moreover, associations of cultures with nitrogen-fixing bactéria and arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi could serve as an alternative and sustainable strategy to increase crop yields in salt affected fields.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpls.2016.01787/fullSalinitytolerance mechanismstransport of sodiumdetoxification pathwaysbeneficial soil microorganismsengineering of plant salinity tolerance. |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Moez HANIN Moez HANIN Chantal Ebel Chantal Ebel Mariama Ngom Mariama Ngom Laurent Laplaze Laurent Laplaze Khaled Masmoudi |
spellingShingle |
Moez HANIN Moez HANIN Chantal Ebel Chantal Ebel Mariama Ngom Mariama Ngom Laurent Laplaze Laurent Laplaze Khaled Masmoudi New Insights on plant salt tolerance mechanisms and their potential use for breeding Frontiers in Plant Science Salinity tolerance mechanisms transport of sodium detoxification pathways beneficial soil microorganisms engineering of plant salinity tolerance. |
author_facet |
Moez HANIN Moez HANIN Chantal Ebel Chantal Ebel Mariama Ngom Mariama Ngom Laurent Laplaze Laurent Laplaze Khaled Masmoudi |
author_sort |
Moez HANIN |
title |
New Insights on plant salt tolerance mechanisms and their potential use for breeding |
title_short |
New Insights on plant salt tolerance mechanisms and their potential use for breeding |
title_full |
New Insights on plant salt tolerance mechanisms and their potential use for breeding |
title_fullStr |
New Insights on plant salt tolerance mechanisms and their potential use for breeding |
title_full_unstemmed |
New Insights on plant salt tolerance mechanisms and their potential use for breeding |
title_sort |
new insights on plant salt tolerance mechanisms and their potential use for breeding |
publisher |
Frontiers Media S.A. |
series |
Frontiers in Plant Science |
issn |
1664-462X |
publishDate |
2016-11-01 |
description |
Soil salinization is a major threat to agriculture in arid and semi-arid regions, where water scarcity and inadequate drainage of irrigated lands severely reduce crop yield. Salt accumulation inhibits plant growth and reduces the ability to uptake water and nutrients, leading to osmotic or water-deficit stress. Salt is also causing injury of the young photosynthetic leaves and acceleration of their senescence, as the Na+ cation is toxic when accumulating in cell cytosol resulting in ionic imbalance and toxicity of transpiring leaves. To cope with salt stress, plants have evolved mainly two types of tolerance mechanisms based on either limiting the entry of salt by the roots, or controlling its concentration and distribution. Understanding the overall control of Na+ accumulation and functional studies of genes involved in transport processes, will provide a new opportunity to improve the salinity tolerance of plants relevant to food security in arid regions. A better understanding of these tolerance mechanisms can be used to breed crops with improved yield performance under salinity stress. Moreover, associations of cultures with nitrogen-fixing bactéria and arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi could serve as an alternative and sustainable strategy to increase crop yields in salt affected fields. |
topic |
Salinity tolerance mechanisms transport of sodium detoxification pathways beneficial soil microorganisms engineering of plant salinity tolerance. |
url |
http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpls.2016.01787/full |
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