31 research outputs found
Salinity tolerance mechanisms in glycophytes: An overview with the central focus on rice plants
Elevated Na+ levels in agricultural lands are increasingly becoming a serious threat to the world agriculture. Plants suffer osmotic and ionic stress under high salinity due to the salts accumulated at the outside of roots and those accumulated at the inside of the plant cells, respectively. Mechanisms of salinity tolerance in plants have been extensively studied and in the recent years these studies focus on the function of key enzymes and plant morphological traits. Here, we provide an updated overview of salt tolerant mechanisms in glycophytes with a particular interest in rice (Oryza sativa) plants. Protective mechanisms that prevent water loss due to the increased osmotic pressure, the development of Na+ toxicity on essential cellular metabolisms, and the movement of ions via the apoplastic pathway (i.e. apoplastic barriers) are described here in detail.ArticleRICE. 5:11 (2012)journal articl
Salinity tolerance mechanisms in glycophytes: An overview with the central focus on rice plants
Salinity tolerance mechanisms in glycophytes: An overview with the central focus on rice plants
Role of ethylene signalling in the formation of constitutive aerenchyma in primary roots of rice
Correction to: A hypergravity environment increases chloroplast size, photosynthesis, and plant growth in the moss Physcomitrella patens
Casparian strip development and its potential function in salt tolerance
The root system is particularly affected by unfavorable conditions because it is in direct contact with the soil environment. Casparian strips, a specialized structure deposited in anticlinal walls, are characterized by the impregnation of the primary wall pores with lignin and suberin. The Casparian strips in the endo- and exodermis of vascular plant roots appear to play an important role in preventing the non-selective apoplastic bypass of salts into the stele along the apoplast under salt stress. However, only a few investigations have examined the deposition and function of these apoplastic barriers in response to salt stress in higher plants