Metabolomics,Multiomics

Dataset Information

3

Metabolomic responses to long-term salt stress in related Lotus species (A)


ABSTRACT: The legume genus Lotus includes glycophytic forage crops and other species adapted to extreme environments, such as saline soils. Understanding salt tolerance mechanisms will contribute to the discovery of new traits which may enhance the breeding efforts towards improved performance of legumes in marginal agricultural environments. Here, we used a combination of ionomic and gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS)-based metabolite profilings of complete shoots (pooling leaves, petioles and stems) to compare the extremophile Lotus creticus, adapted to highly saline coastal regions, and two cultivated glycophytic grassland forage species, Lotus corniculatus and Lotus tenuis. L. creticus exhibited better survival after exposure to long-term lethal salinity and was more efficient at excluding Cl- from the shoots than the glycophytes. In contrast, Na+ levels were higher in the extremophile under both control and salt stress, a trait often observed in halophytes. Ionomics demonstrated a differential rearrangement of shoot nutrient levels in the extremophile upon salt exposure. Metabolite profiling showed that responses to NaCl in L. creticus shoots were globally similar to those of the glycophytes, providing little evidence for metabolic pre-adaptation to salinity. This study is the first comparing salt acclimation responses between extremophile and non-extremophile legumes, and challenges the generalization of the metabolic salt pre-adaptation hypothesis.

INSTRUMENT(S): GC-MS

SUBMITTER: Joachim Kopka 

PROVIDER: MTBLS14 | MetaboLights | 2015-09-14

REPOSITORIES: MetaboLights

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Publications

Comparative functional genomics of salt stress in related model and cultivated plants identifies and overcomes limitations to translational genomics.

Sanchez Diego H DH   Pieckenstain Fernando L FL   Szymanski Jedrzey J   Erban Alexander A   Bromke Mariusz M   Hannah Matthew A MA   Kraemer Ute U   Kopka Joachim J   Udvardi Michael K MK  

PloS one 20110214 2


One of the objectives of plant translational genomics is to use knowledge and genes discovered in model species to improve crops. However, the value of translational genomics to plant breeding, especially for complex traits like abiotic stress tolerance, remains uncertain. Using comparative genomics (ionomics, transcriptomics and metabolomics) we analyzed the responses to salinity of three model and three cultivated species of the legume genus Lotus. At physiological and ionomic levels, models r  ...[more]

Publication: 1/2

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