Logo image
Salinity and drought tolerance of mannitol-accumulating transgenic tobacco
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Salinity and drought tolerance of mannitol-accumulating transgenic tobacco

B Karakas, P OZIAS-AKINS, C Stushnoff, M Suefferheld and M Rieger
Plant, cell and environment, Vol.20(5), pp.609-616
05-1997

Abstract

Agronomy. Soil science and plant productions Biological and medical sciences Economic plant physiology Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology Plant physiology and development Water and solutes. Absorption, translocation and permeability Water relations, transpiration, stomata
Tobacco plants (Nicotiana tabacum L.) were transformed with a mannitol-1-phosphate dehydrogenase gene resulting in mannitol accumulation. Experiments were conducted to determine whether mannitol provides salt and/or drought stress protection through osmotic adjustment. Non-stressed transgenic plants were 20–25% smaller than non-stressed, non-transformed (wild-type) plants in both salinity and drought experiments. However, salt stress reduced dry weight in wild-type plants by 44%, but did not reduce the dry weight of transgenic plants. Transgenic plants adjusted osmotically by 0.57 MPa, whereas wild-type plants did not adjust osmotically in response to salt stress. Calculations of solute contribution to osmotic adjustment showed that mannitol contributed only 0-003-0-004 MPa to the 0.2 MPa difference in full turgor osmotic potential (πo) between salt-stressed transgenic and wild-type plants. Assuming a cytoplasmic location for mannitol and that the cytoplasm constituted 5% of the total water volume, mannitol accounted for only 30–40% of the change in πo of the cytoplasm. Inositol, a naturally occurring polyol in tobacco, accumulated in response to salt stress in both transgenic and wild-type plants, and was 3-fold more abundant than mannitol in transgenic plants.
url
Link to published article.View

Related links

Details

Logo image