Understanding the role of boron in plant adaptation to soil salinity

Author:

Qu Mei123,Huang Xin1,García‐Caparrós Pedro4ORCID,Shabala Lana12ORCID,Fuglsang Anja Thoe3ORCID,Yu Min1,Shabala Sergey15ORCID

Affiliation:

1. International Research Center for Environmental Membrane Biology Foshan University Foshan China

2. Tasmanian Institute of Agriculture, University of Tasmania Hobart Australia

3. Department of Plant and Environmental Sciences University of Copenhagen Copenhagen Denmark

4. Agronomy Department of Superior School Engineering University of Almería Almería Spain

5. School of Biological Sciences, University of Western Australia Perth Australia

Abstract

AbstractSoil salinity is a major environmental constraint affecting the sustainability and profitability of agricultural production systems. Salinity stress tolerance has been present in wild crop relatives but then lost, or significantly weakened, during their domestication. Given the genetic and physiological complexity of salinity tolerance traits, agronomical solutions may be a suitable alternative to crop breeding for improved salinity stress tolerance. One of them is optimizing fertilization practices to assist plants in dealing with elevated salt levels in the soil. In this review, we analyse the causal relationship between the availability of boron (an essential metalloid micronutrient) and plant's adaptive responses to salinity stress at the whole‐plant, cellular, and molecular levels, and a possibility of using boron for salt stress mitigation. The topics covered include the impact of salinity and the role of boron in cell wall remodelling, plasma membrane integrity, hormonal signalling, and operation of various membrane transporters mediating plant ionic and water homeostasis. Of specific interest is the role of boron in the regulation of H+‐ATPase activity whose operation is essential for the control of a broad range of voltage‐gated ion channels. The complex relationship between boron availability and expression patterns and the operation of aquaporins is also discussed.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

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