Login / Signup

HKT1;1 and HKT1;2 Na + Transporters from Solanum galapagense Play Different Roles in the Plant Na + Distribution under Salinity.

Maria Jose AsinsMaria R Romero-ArandaJesus EspinosaPaloma González-FernándezEmilio Jaime-FernándezJose A TraversoEmilio A CarbonellAndrés Belver
Published in: International journal of molecular sciences (2022)
Salt tolerance is a target trait in plant science and tomato breeding programs. Wild tomato accessions have been often explored for this purpose. Since shoot Na + /K + is a key component of salt tolerance, RNAi-mediated knockdown isogenic lines obtained for Solanum galapagense alleles encoding both class I Na + transporters HKT1;1 and HKT1;2 were used to investigate the silencing effects on the Na and K contents of the xylem sap, and source and sink organs of the scion, and their contribution to salt tolerance in all 16 rootstock/scion combinations of non-silenced and silenced lines, under two salinity treatments. The results show that SgHKT1;1 is operating differently from SgHKT1;2 regarding Na circulation in the tomato vascular system under salinity. A model was built to show that using silenced SgHKT1;1 line as rootstock would improve salt tolerance and fruit quality of varieties carrying the wild type SgHKT1;2 allele. Moreover, this increasing effect on both yield and fruit soluble solids content of silencing SgHKT1;1 could explain that a low expressing HKT1;1 variant was fixed in S. lycopersicum during domestication, and the paradox of increasing agronomic salt tolerance through silencing the HKT1;1 allele from S. galapagense , a salt adapted species.
Keyphrases
  • microbial community
  • wild type
  • genome wide
  • quality improvement