Abstract

Arabinogalactan proteins (AGPs) are a highly diverse family of glycoproteins that are commonly found in most plant species. However, little is known about the physiological and molecular mechanisms of their function. AGPs are involved in different biological processes such as cell differentiation, cell expansion, tissue development and somatic embryogenesis. AGPs are also involved in abiotic stress response such as salinity modulating cell wall expansion. In this study, we describe how salt-adaptation in tobacco BY-2 cell cultures induces important changes in arabinogalactan proteins distribution and contents. Using the immuno-dot blot technique with different anti-AGP antibodies (JIM13, JIM15, and others), we observed that AGPs were highly accumulated in the culture medium of salt-adapted tobacco cells, probably due to the action of phospholipases. We located these AGP epitopes using immunogold labeling in the cytoplasm associated to the endoplasmic reticulum, the golgi apparatus, and vesicles, plasma membrane and tonoplast. Our results show that salt-adaptation induced a significant reduction of the cytoplasm, plasma membrane and tonoplast content of these epitopes. Yariv reagent was added to the control and salt-adapted tobacco cell cultures, leading to cell death induction in control cells but not in salt-adapted cells. Ultrastructural and immunogold labeling revealed that cell death induced by Yariv reagent in control cells was due to the interaction of Yariv reagent with the AGPs linked to the plasma membranes. Finally, we propose a new function of AGPs as a possible sodium carrier through the mechanism of vesicle trafficking from the apoplast to the vacuoles in salt-adapted tobacco BY-2 cells. This mechanism may contribute to sodium homeostasis during salt-adaptation to high saline concentrations.

Highlights

  • Salt stress is one of the major factors that affect plant development and production

  • We previously developed a microarray analysis of control and salt-adapted tobacco BY-2 cell cultures

  • The coil structure was located between the plasma membrane and cell walls (Figures 7A,B)

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Summary

Introduction

Salt stress is one of the major factors that affect plant development and production. Salinization of agricultural lands has increased progressively in recent decades. Glycophyte crops lose their vigor even in slightly saline soils and most crops are negatively affected by moderate salinity (Munns and Gilliham, 2015). Arabinogalactan Proteins in Salt-Adaptation develop various physiological and biochemical mechanisms in order to avoid the negative effect of salinity. Little is known about the role of the different components of cell walls during salt adaptation to highly saline conditions. Plant cell walls contain many different proteins, and among them, proteoglycans and glycoproteins are abundantly represented. The hydroxyprolinerich glycoprotein (HRGP) superfamily comprises three main families, arabinogalactan proteins (AGPs, highly glycosylated), extensins (moderately glycosylated), and prolin-rich proteins (lightly glycosylated). Most of the hydroxyproline residues are O-glycosylated by arabino-3,6-galactans, but short arabinosides have been found

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