TY - JOUR A1 - Bazihizina, Nadia A1 - Böhm, Jennifer A1 - Messerer, Maxim A1 - Stigloher, Christian A1 - Müller, Heike M. A1 - Cuin, Tracey Ann A1 - Maierhofer, Tobias A1 - Cabot, Joan A1 - Mayer, Klaus F. X. A1 - Fella, Christian A1 - Huang, Shouguang A1 - Al‐Rasheid, Khaled A. S. A1 - Alquraishi, Saleh A1 - Breadmore, Michael A1 - Mancuso, Stefano A1 - Shabala, Sergey A1 - Ache, Peter A1 - Zhang, Heng A1 - Zhu, Jian‐Kang A1 - Hedrich, Rainer A1 - Scherzer, Sönke T1 - Stalk cell polar ion transport provide for bladder‐based salinity tolerance in Chenopodium quinoa JF - New Phytologist N2 - Chenopodium quinoa uses epidermal bladder cells (EBCs) to sequester excess salt. Each EBC complex consists of a leaf epidermal cell, a stalk cell, and the bladder. Under salt stress, sodium (Na\(^{+}\)), chloride (Cl\(^{−}\)), potassium (K\(^{+}\)) and various metabolites are shuttled from the leaf lamina to the bladders. Stalk cells operate as both a selectivity filter and a flux controller. In line with the nature of a transfer cell, advanced transmission electron tomography, electrophysiology, and fluorescent tracer flux studies revealed the stalk cell’s polar organization and bladder‐directed solute flow. RNA sequencing and cluster analysis revealed the gene expression profiles of the stalk cells. Among the stalk cell enriched genes, ion channels and carriers as well as sugar transporters were most pronounced. Based on their electrophysiological fingerprint and thermodynamic considerations, a model for stalk cell transcellular transport was derived. KW - halophyte KW - polar ion transport KW - quinoa KW - salt tolerance KW - stalk cell Y1 - 2022 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-287222 VL - 235 IS - 5 SP - 1822 EP - 1835 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Karimi, Sohail M. A1 - Freund, Matthias A1 - Wager, Brittney M. A1 - Knoblauch, Michael A1 - Fromm, Jörg A1 - M. Mueller, Heike A1 - Ache, Peter A1 - Krischke, Markus A1 - Mueller, Martin J. A1 - Müller, Tobias A1 - Dittrich, Marcus A1 - Geilfus, Christoph-Martin A1 - Alfaran, Ahmed H. A1 - Hedrich, Rainer A1 - Deeken, Rosalia T1 - Under salt stress guard cells rewire ion transport and abscisic acid signaling JF - New Phytologist N2 - Soil salinity is an increasingly global problem which hampers plant growth and crop yield. Plant productivity depends on optimal water-use efficiency and photosynthetic capacity balanced by stomatal conductance. Whether and how stomatal behavior contributes to salt sensitivity or tolerance is currently unknown. This work identifies guard cell-specific signaling networks exerted by a salt-sensitive and salt-tolerant plant under ionic and osmotic stress conditions accompanied by increasing NaCl loads. We challenged soil-grown Arabidopsis thaliana and Thellungiella salsuginea plants with short- and long-term salinity stress and monitored genome-wide gene expression and signals of guard cells that determine their function. Arabidopsis plants suffered from both salt regimes and showed reduced stomatal conductance while Thellungiella displayed no obvious stress symptoms. The salt-dependent gene expression changes of guard cells supported the ability of the halophyte to maintain high potassium to sodium ratios and to attenuate the abscisic acid (ABA) signaling pathway which the glycophyte kept activated despite fading ABA concentrations. Our study shows that salinity stress and even the different tolerances are manifested on a single cell level. Halophytic guard cells are less sensitive than glycophytic guard cells, providing opportunities to manipulate stomatal behavior and improve plant productivity. KW - soil KW - stomata KW - abscisic acid (ABA) KW - glycophyte Arabidopsis KW - guard cell KW - halophyte Thellungiella/Eutrema KW - ion transport KW - salt stress Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-259635 VL - 231 IS - 3 ER -