Publication | Open Access
A Ca2+-sensor switch for tolerance to elevated salt stress in Arabidopsis
100
Citations
80
References
2022
Year
Excessive Na<sup>+</sup> in soils inhibits plant growth. Here, we report that Na<sup>+</sup> stress triggers primary calcium signals specifically in a cell group within the root differentiation zone, thus forming a "sodium-sensing niche" in Arabidopsis. The amplitude of this primary calcium signal and the speed of the resulting Ca<sup>2+</sup> wave dose-dependently increase with rising Na<sup>+</sup> concentrations, thus providing quantitative information about the stress intensity encountered. We also delineate a Ca<sup>2+</sup>-sensing mechanism that measures the stress intensity in order to mount appropriate salt detoxification responses. This is mediated by a Ca<sup>2+</sup>-sensor-switch mechanism, in which the sensors SOS3/CBL4 and CBL8 are activated by distinct Ca<sup>2+</sup>-signal amplitudes. Although the SOS3/CBL4-SOS2/CIPK24-SOS1 axis confers basal salt tolerance, the CBL8-SOS2/CIPK24-SOS1 module becomes additionally activated only in response to severe salt stress. Thus, Ca<sup>2+</sup>-mediated translation of Na<sup>+</sup> stress intensity into SOS1 Na<sup>+</sup>/H<sup>+</sup> antiporter activity facilitates fine tuning of the sodium extrusion capacity for optimized salt-stress tolerance.
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