High
levels of sodium-containing salts in the soil are a problem for many plants: as
a result, they do not grow well, or not at all. Soil
salinizationis seen as one of the greatest threats
to feeding the world's population, as it makes soils increasingly poor,
especially in arid regions. A research team of Chinese, German and Spanish
researchers, including Professor Jörg Kudla and his team at the University of
Meinastre in Germany, has now discovered a mechanism in Arabidopsis thaliana
that enables plants protect sensitive stem cells in the root tip meristem against
salt stress. The meristem, which ensures the constant formation of new cells in
the root and thus growth, is particularly sensitive: In contrast to fully
formed plant cells, it has no vacuoles inside the cells that can process
harmful substances.
Researchers
were surprised to find that plants can provide protection to individual
populations of cells against the stress of toxic salts. While we already know
that plants have multiple mechanisms that allow them to cope with high salt
levels in soil water, one is the active transport of salt in the cells, and the
other is the mechanical maceration of specific cell layers in the root system.
But what we didn't know was that plants also specialize in protecting the stem
cells in their roots "The signaling pathway we discovered, combining
components of known salt stress signaling pathways with signaling proteins that
control root development, has the additional purpose of detoxifying the
plant," says Jörg Kudla.
The
mechanism: A specific enzyme, a receptor-like kinase called GSO1, transports
sodium out of the cells of the meristem. To this end, GSO1 activates the kinase
SOS2 (SOS stands for "salt oversensitivity"), which in turn activates
the transporter SOS1, which pumps sodium ions outward through the cell membrane
and, in turn, transports protons into the cell. Under salt stress, the
formation of GSO1 increases, especially in meristem cells.
In
addition, the team demonstrated that GSO1 also helps prevent excess salt from
seeping into the vascular tissue of the root. This vascular tissue is located
inside the plant and transports water and minerals from the roots to the
leaves. Water seeps into it in an uncontrolled manner through a mechanical
barrier, the Casparis strip, which prevents dissolved minerals in the soil. The
researchers also demonstrated that in cells that form Casparian stripes, GSO1
levels increase due to salt stress.
"GSO1
is a well-known receptor kinase in plant developmental biology," says Jörg
Kudla. "It plays an important role in various stages of plant
development. Now, for the first time, we have been
able to show that it also plays a role in salt tolerance. And activate the
'sodium pump' through another signaling pathway that may not depend on
calcium." Calcium signaling in cells plays a key role in other known
adaptive responses of plants to salt stress.
Regarding
the method: The team discovered the importance of GSO1 by comparing numerous
mutants of various receptor-like kinases in thale clothing. By studying the
protein-protein interactions, they identified the enzyme's reaction partners in
the signaling pathways that protect the meristem and form Casparian strips.
Methods for further investigation include mass spectrometry and high-resolution
microscopy.
The Wall