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Linked Open Data
A cross population between D. kaki and D. virginiana shows high variability for saline tolerance and improved salt stress tolerance
Identificadores del recurso
Gil-Muñoz, F., Pérez-Pérez, J. G., Quiñones, A., Primo-Capella, A., Cebolla, J., Forner-Giner, M. Á. et al. (2020). A cross population between D. kaki and D. virginiana shows high variability for saline tolerance and improved salt stress tolerance. Plos one, 15(2), e0229023.
e0229023
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11939/6517
10.1371/journal.pone.0229023
https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0229023
Procedencia
(ReDIVIA: Repositori Digital de l'Institut Valencià d'Investigacions Agràries)

Ficha

Título:
A cross population between D. kaki and D. virginiana shows high variability for saline tolerance and improved salt stress tolerance
Tema:
Tolerance to salinity
Persimmon
F30 Plant genetics and breeding
Rootstocks
Descripción:
Persimmon (Diospyros kaki Thunb.) production is facing important problems related to climate change in the Mediterranean areas. One of them is soil salinization caused by the decrease and change of the rainfall distribution. In this context, there is a need to develop cultivars adapted to the increasingly challenging soil conditions. In this study, a backcross between (D. kaki x D. virginiana) x D. kaki was conducted, to unravel the mechanism involved in salinity tolerance of persimmon. The backcross involved the two species most used as rootstock for persimmon production. Both species are clearly distinct in their level of tolerance to salinity. Variables related to growth, leaf gas exchange, leaf water relations and content of nutrients were significantly affected by saline stress in the backcross population. Water flow regulation appears as a mechanism of salt tolerance in persimmon via differences in water potential and transpiration rate, which reduces ion entrance in the plant. Genetic expression of eight putative orthologous genes involved in different mechanisms leading to salt tolerance was analyzed. Differences in expression levels among populations under saline or control treatment were found. The ‘High affinity potassium transporter’ (HKT1-like) reduced its expression levels in the roots in all studied populations. Results obtained allowed selection of tolerant rootstocks genotypes and describe the hypothesis about the mechanisms involved in salt tolerance in persimmon that will be useful for breeding salinity tolerant rootstocks
Fuente:
electronico
Idioma:
Relación:
info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/ERDF/POCV 2014-2020/51914/ES/Producción de nuevas variedades de frutales alternativos a los cítricos adaptadas al cambio climático
Producción de nuevas variedades de frutales alternativos a los cítricos adaptadas al cambio climático. IVIA 51914
Autor/Productor:
Gil-Muñoz, Francisco
Pérez-Pérez, Juan G.
Quinones, Ana
Primo-Capella, Amparo
Cebolla-Cornejo, Jaime
Forner-Giner, María A.
Badenes, María L.
Editor:
Carl Ng, University College Dublin,
Derechos:
Atribución-NoComercial-SinDerivadas 3.0 España
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/es/
openAccess
Fecha:
2020-06-11T09:27:05Z
2020
Tipo de recurso:
article
publishedVersion

oai_dc

Descargar XML

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    1. <dc:title>A cross population between D. kaki and D. virginiana shows high variability for saline tolerance and improved salt stress tolerance</dc:title>

    2. <dc:creator>Gil-Muñoz, Francisco</dc:creator>

    3. <dc:creator>Pérez-Pérez, Juan G.</dc:creator>

    4. <dc:creator>Quinones, Ana</dc:creator>

    5. <dc:creator>Primo-Capella, Amparo</dc:creator>

    6. <dc:creator>Cebolla-Cornejo, Jaime</dc:creator>

    7. <dc:creator>Forner-Giner, María A.</dc:creator>

    8. <dc:creator>Badenes, María L.</dc:creator>

    9. <dc:subject>Tolerance to salinity</dc:subject>

    10. <dc:subject>Persimmon</dc:subject>

    11. <dc:subject>F30 Plant genetics and breeding</dc:subject>

    12. <dc:subject>Rootstocks</dc:subject>

    13. <dc:description>Persimmon (Diospyros kaki Thunb.) production is facing important problems related to climate change in the Mediterranean areas. One of them is soil salinization caused by the decrease and change of the rainfall distribution. In this context, there is a need to develop cultivars adapted to the increasingly challenging soil conditions. In this study, a backcross between (D. kaki x D. virginiana) x D. kaki was conducted, to unravel the mechanism involved in salinity tolerance of persimmon. The backcross involved the two species most used as rootstock for persimmon production. Both species are clearly distinct in their level of tolerance to salinity. Variables related to growth, leaf gas exchange, leaf water relations and content of nutrients were significantly affected by saline stress in the backcross population. Water flow regulation appears as a mechanism of salt tolerance in persimmon via differences in water potential and transpiration rate, which reduces ion entrance in the plant. Genetic expression of eight putative orthologous genes involved in different mechanisms leading to salt tolerance was analyzed. Differences in expression levels among populations under saline or control treatment were found. The ‘High affinity potassium transporter’ (HKT1-like) reduced its expression levels in the roots in all studied populations. Results obtained allowed selection of tolerant rootstocks genotypes and describe the hypothesis about the mechanisms involved in salt tolerance in persimmon that will be useful for breeding salinity tolerant rootstocks</dc:description>

    14. <dc:date>2020-06-11T09:27:05Z</dc:date>

    15. <dc:date>2020-06-11T09:27:05Z</dc:date>

    16. <dc:date>2020</dc:date>

    17. <dc:type>article</dc:type>

    18. <dc:type>publishedVersion</dc:type>

    19. <dc:identifier>Gil-Muñoz, F., Pérez-Pérez, J. G., Quiñones, A., Primo-Capella, A., Cebolla, J., Forner-Giner, M. Á. et al. (2020). A cross population between D. kaki and D. virginiana shows high variability for saline tolerance and improved salt stress tolerance. Plos one, 15(2), e0229023.</dc:identifier>

    20. <dc:identifier>e0229023</dc:identifier>

    21. <dc:identifier>http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11939/6517</dc:identifier>

    22. <dc:identifier>10.1371/journal.pone.0229023</dc:identifier>

    23. <dc:identifier>https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0229023</dc:identifier>

    24. <dc:language>en</dc:language>

    25. <dc:relation>info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/ERDF/POCV 2014-2020/51914/ES/Producción de nuevas variedades de frutales alternativos a los cítricos adaptadas al cambio climático</dc:relation>

    26. <dc:relation>Producción de nuevas variedades de frutales alternativos a los cítricos adaptadas al cambio climático. IVIA 51914</dc:relation>

    27. <dc:rights>Atribución-NoComercial-SinDerivadas 3.0 España</dc:rights>

    28. <dc:rights>http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/es/</dc:rights>

    29. <dc:rights>openAccess</dc:rights>

    30. <dc:publisher>Carl Ng, University College Dublin,</dc:publisher>

    31. <dc:source>electronico</dc:source>

    </oai_dc:dc>

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