Gene boosts rice growth and yield in salty soil
IMAGE: Members
of the research team collecting samples in a rice paddy field in Changsha,
China.
Image
credit:
Jianzhong
Lin
Around 20% of the world's irrigated land is considered to contain
elevated concentrations of salt, and the soil continues to get saltier as the
climate warms. Agricultural production is hard hit by soil salinity; salt
stress reduces the growth and yield of most plants, resulting in billions of
dollars in crop yield losses annually. Rice--the staple food of more than half
the world's population--is particularly sensitive to salty soil, with even
moderate levels of salt resulting in substantial yield losses. There is thus an
urgent need to develop rice lines that can withstand salty conditions.
A team of scientists led by Jian-Zhong Lin and Xuan-Ming Liu of
Hunan University in Changsha, China recently identified a gene that contributes
to salt stress tolerance in rice. The gene, which they named STRK1 (salt
tolerance receptor-like cytoplasmic kinase 1), was activated under salt stress
conditions. The researchers generated two sets of transgenic plants, one in
which STRK1 was expressed at high levels, and the other in which expression was
greatly reduced. Under regular growth conditions, both sets of transgenic
plants appeared normal. However, when challenged with salt, the transgenic
plants with elevated STRK1 expression were greener and larger than the
non-transgenic control plants, and those with reduced levels of STRK1
expression were smaller and browner than the controls.
Next, the team examined the effect of STRK1 on yield.
"Notably, overexpression of STRK1 in rice not only improved growth but
also markedly limited the grain yield loss under salt stress conditions,"
said Jian-Zhong Lin.
The team then turned their attention to deciphering the
mechanism by which STRK1 enhances the plant's tolerance to salt. Salt stress
triggers the production of potentially harmful reactive oxygen species, such as
hydrogen peroxide, in plant cells. The group found that STRK1 (the protein
encoded by STRK1) interacts with and activates a protein named CatC, which
belongs to a family of proteins that decomposes hydrogen peroxide into water
and oxygen. Thus, STRK1 increases the plant's tolerance to salt stress by keeping
the levels of hydrogen peroxide in check, and thereby minimizing the damage
caused by accumulating reactive oxygen species.
No comments:
Post a Comment