Abstract

Potato is an important world crop but its cultivation is relatively limited by its sensitivity to salt-stress. Auto- and hetero-grafting was used to examine the effect of rootstock and abscisic acid (ABA) on expression of the Ca 2+-storage protein calreticulin ( CR) and salt-stress tolerance in potato. Sibling-selected diploid clones of potato ( S. tuberosum) were utilized that are distinguished by differential root Na + absorption; including type: late-maturing, LM and excluding type, early-maturing, EM under salt treatment; salt-stress sensitivity (S/T, sensitive or tolerant); and abscisic acid production (AD/AN, ABA-deficient or-normal sibling lines). CR expression, osmotic potential (OP) and leaf Ca 2+ were measured at the end of a 5 days NaCl stress treatment applied at tuber initiation. Increased CR expression was induced by NaCl stress and associated with salt tolerance in early-maturing tolerant (EMT) and late-maturing tolerant (LMT) clones with higher levels of CR in LMT compared to the EMT clone. Early-maturing sensitive (EMS) clone salt tolerance increased when grafted onto LMT but not onto EMT rootstocks. EMS scions maintained less negative leaf OP when grafted onto LMT rootstocks than grafting onto the EMT rootstock. Exogenous ABA application induced a less negative upper leaf OP in the salt-stress sensitive AD clone but not in the AN clone. AD clones were characterized by low CR levels, which did not increase after stress. However, grafting the AD clone onto LMT increased CR expression in the AD portion of the graft combination. Salt-stress induced CR expression and is positively associated with the presence of ABA and the salt-stress tolerant phenotypes. Both, elevation in CR expression and salt tolerance in the tolerant rootstocks, were translocated to sensitive scions although highest permeation depended on the LM type. Calreticulin expression appears to be involved in ABA-induced salt tolerance and both salt-stress tolerance and CR expression appear to be regulated by the roots.

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