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Cell‐specific localization of Na + in roots of durum wheat and possible control points for salt exclusion
Author(s) -
LÄUCHLI ANDRÉ,
JAMES RICHARD A.,
HUANG CHENG X.,
McCULLY MARGARET,
MUNNS RANA
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
plant, cell and environment
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.646
H-Index - 200
eISSN - 1365-3040
pISSN - 0140-7791
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-3040.2008.01864.x
Subject(s) - endodermis , xylem , pericycle , parenchyma , transpiration stream , botany , shoot , sodium , chemistry , transpiration , epidermis (zoology) , biophysics , horticulture , biology , anatomy , biochemistry , photosynthesis , arabidopsis , organic chemistry , mutant , gene
Sodium exclusion from leaves is an important mechanism for salt tolerance in durum wheat. To characterize possible control points for Na + exclusion, quantitative cryo‐analytical scanning electron microscopy was used to determine cell‐specific ion profiles across roots of two durum wheat genotypes with contrasting rates of Na + transport from root to shoot grown in 50 m m NaCl. The Na + concentration in Line 149 (low transport genotype) declined across the cortex, being highest in the epidermal and sub‐epidermal cells (48 m m ) and lowest in the inner cortical cells (22 m m ). Na + was high in the pericycle (85 m m ) and low in the xylem parenchyma (34 m m ). The Na + profile in Tamaroi (high transport genotype) had a similar trend but with a high concentration (130 m m ) in the xylem parenchyma. The K + profiles were generally inverse to those of Na + . Chloride was only detected in the epidermis. These data suggest that the epidermal and cortical cells removed most of the Na + and Cl ‐ from the transpiration stream before it reached the endodermis, and that the endodermis is not the control point for salt uptake by the plant. The pericycle as well as the xylem parenchyma may be important in the control of net Na + loading of the xylem.