Login / Signup

A single nucleotide substitution in TaHKT1;5-D controls shoot Na+ accumulation in bread wheat.

Chana BorjiginRhiannon Kate SchillingJayakumar BoseMaria HrmovaJiaen QiuStefanie WegeApriadi SitumorangCaitlin S ByrtChristopher James BrienBettina BergerMatthew GillihamAllison S PearsonStuart John Roy
Published in: Plant, cell & environment (2020)
Improving salinity tolerance in the most widely cultivated cereal, bread wheat (Triticum aestivum L.), is essential to increase grain yields on saline agricultural lands. A Portuguese landrace, Mocho de Espiga Branca accumulates up to sixfold greater leaf and sheath sodium (Na+ ) than two Australian cultivars, Gladius and Scout, under salt stress in hydroponics. Despite high leaf and sheath Na+ concentrations, Mocho de Espiga Branca maintained similar salinity tolerance compared to Gladius and Scout. A naturally occurring single nucleotide substitution was identified in the gene encoding a major Na+ transporter TaHKT1;5-D in Mocho de Espiga Branca, which resulted in a L190P amino acid residue variation. This variant prevents Mocho de Espiga Branca from retrieving Na+ from the root xylem leading to a high shoot Na+ concentration. The identification of the tissue-tolerant Mocho de Espiga Branca will accelerate the development of more elite salt-tolerant bread wheat cultivars.
Keyphrases
  • amino acid
  • microbial community
  • risk assessment
  • gene expression
  • genome wide