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1.
Front Plant Sci ; 4: 8, 2013.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23386857

ABSTRACT

Increasing of world population marks a serious need to create new crop cultivars and medicinal plants with high growth and production at any environmental situations. Among the environmental unfavorable conditions, salinity is the most widespread in the world. Crop production and growth severely decreases under salt stress; however, some crop cultivars show significant tolerance against the negative effects of salinity. Among salt stress responses of crops, proteomic responses play a pivotal role in their ability to cope with it and have become the main center of notification. Many physiological responses are detectable in terms of protein increase and decrease even before physiological responses take place. Thus proteomic approach makes a short cut in the way of inferring how crops response to salt stress. Nowadays many salt-responsive proteins such as heat shock proteins, pathogen-related proteins, protein kinases, ascorbate peroxidase, osmotin, ornithine decarboxylase, and some transcription factors, have been detected in some major crops which are thought to give them the ability of withstanding against salt stress. Proteomic analysis of medicinal plants also revealed that alkaloid biosynthesis related proteins such as tryptophan synthase, codeinone reductase, strictosidine synthase, and 12-oxophytodienoate reductase might have major role in production of secondary metabolites. In this review we are comparing some different or similar proteomic responses of several crops and medicinal plants to salt stress and discuss about the future prospects.

2.
J Proteomics ; 74(8): 1323-37, 2011 Aug 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21440686

ABSTRACT

Salinity in agricultural land is a major problem worldwide, placing a severe constraint on crop growth and productivity in many regions, and increased salinization of arable land is expected to have devastating global effects. Though plants vary in their sensitivity to salt stress, high salinity causes water deficit and ion toxicity in many plant species. Considerable efforts have therefore been made to investigate how genes respond to salt stress in various plants by using several approaches, including proteomics. Proteomic approaches for identifying proteins that are regulated in response to salt stress are becoming common in the post-genomics era of crop research. In this review, we describe the physiological and biological changes in the proteomes of several important food crops under salt stress. We also provide a viewpoint into how proteomics-based research is likely to develop in this field.


Subject(s)
Plant Proteins/drug effects , Proteome/drug effects , Salinity , Sodium Chloride/adverse effects , Gene Expression Profiling , Oryza/drug effects , Oryza/genetics , Plants/genetics , Poaceae/drug effects , Poaceae/genetics , Proteome/metabolism , Proteomics , Solanum tuberosum/drug effects , Solanum tuberosum/genetics , Glycine max/drug effects , Glycine max/genetics
3.
J Integr Plant Biol ; 51(12): 1095-103, 2009 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20021557

ABSTRACT

To understand the response of potato to salt stress, antioxidant enzyme activities and ion content were analyzed for a sensitive and a tolerant cultivar. Nodal cuttings of the tolerant cultivar, Kennebec, and the sensitive cultivar, Concord, were exposed to media without or with 30, 60, 90 or 120 mmol/L NaCl for 4 weeks. On exposure to NaCl, the length and fresh and dry weight of both shoots and roots of Concord showed greater decrease than those of Kennebec. The decrease in shoot growth was more severe than that of the root for both cultivars. The K(+) content of shoots and roots of both cultivars was reduced in a dose-dependent manner by exposure to NaCl; the Na(+) content increased. Activities of ascorbate peroxidase, catalase and glutathione reductase were increased in NaCl-exposed shoots of Kennebec; the corresponding activities in NaCl-exposed shoots of Concord were decreased. Roots of both cultivars showed similar changes in the activities of these enzymes on exposure to NaCl. These studies established that enzyme activities in Concord shoots are inversely related to the NaCl concentration, whereas those in Kennebec do not show a dose dependency, which is also the case for the roots of both cultivars. Our findings suggest that an increase in activity of antioxidant enzymes, such as ascorbate peroxidase, catalase and glutathione reductase, can contribute to salt tolerance in Kennebec, a salt resistant cultivar of potato.


Subject(s)
Antioxidants/metabolism , Salinity , Sodium/metabolism , Solanum tuberosum/enzymology , Stress, Physiological , Plant Roots/metabolism , Plant Shoots/metabolism , Potassium/metabolism , Solanum tuberosum/growth & development
4.
J Proteome Res ; 7(11): 4858-68, 2008 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18855355

ABSTRACT

Because salt stress is a major abiotic source of stress on potato crops, the molecular mechanism of the response of potato plants to salt stress was examined. On exposure to salt, the salt-sensitive cultivar Concord showed a greater reduction in shoot and root length than did the salt-tolerant cultivar Kennebec. For both cultivars, the reduction in the length of shoots was more severe than that of the roots. Salt exposure increased the content of free proline and total soluble sugars in shoots of Kennebec; these remained unchanged in Concord. Proteins extracted from shoots of both cultivars exposed to 90 mM NaCl were separated by two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis: 322 and 305 proteins were detected in shoots of Kennebec and Concord, respectively. Of these, 47 proteins were differentially expressed under NaCl treatment in shoot of both cultivars. Among the differentially expressed proteins, photosynthesis- and protein-synthesis-related proteins were drastically down-regulated, whereas osmotine-like proteins, TSI-1 protein, heat-shock proteins, protein inhibitors, calreticulin, and five novel proteins were markedly up-regulated. These results suggest that up-regulation of defense-associated proteins may confer relative salt tolerance to potato plants.


Subject(s)
Gene Expression Regulation, Plant/drug effects , Proteome/analysis , Sodium Chloride/pharmacology , Solanum tuberosum/drug effects , Carbohydrate Metabolism , Carbohydrates/chemistry , Models, Biological , Plant Roots/drug effects , Plant Roots/genetics , Plant Roots/metabolism , Plant Shoots/drug effects , Plant Shoots/genetics , Plant Shoots/metabolism , Proline/metabolism , Proteome/genetics , Proteome/metabolism , Proteomics/methods , Solanum tuberosum/genetics , Solanum tuberosum/metabolism , Solubility
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