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Title

Potato plants bearing a vacuolar Na/H antiporter HvNHX2 from barley are characterized by improved salt tolerance.

Authors

Bayat, F.; Shiran, B.; Belyaev, D. V.; Yur'eva, N. O.; Sobol'kova, G. I.; Alizadeh, H.; Khodambashi, M.; Babakov, A. V

Abstract

Two cultivars of potato ( Solanum tuberosum L.) were transformed with a barley antiporter gene HvNHX2 driven by the CaMV 35S promoter. The expressed transgene conferred a higher NaCl tolerance to one of the cultivars. Under salt stress, the more salt-tolerant transgenic plants had longer roots, higher dry weight, and suppressed cell expansion as compared to wild-type plants. The salt tolerance of the plants grown in vitro was not accompanied by elevated total sodium in any plant organs tested. Instead, higher potassium was found in roots of transgenic plants. Possible mechanisms of plant salt tolerance are discussed.

Subjects

PLANT germplasm; POTATOES; TRANSGENIC plants; PLANT genetic engineering; SODIUM; TRANSGENIC organisms

Publication

Russian Journal of Plant Physiology, 2010, Vol 57, Issue 5, p696

ISSN

1021-4437

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1134/S1021443710050134

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