A Tunisian wild grape leads to metabolic fingerprints of salt tolerance.

Plant Physiol

Molecular Cell Biology, Joseph Gottlied Kölreuter Institute for Plant Sciences, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Karlsruhe 76131, Germany.

Published: August 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Soil salinity is increasingly threatening agriculture, especially viticulture, and there’s a need to identify genetic traits in grapevines that can help them resist these conditions.
  • A study compared a salt-tolerant grapevine from Tunisia, "Tebaba," with a commonly used rootstock, "1103 Paulsen," to understand their responses to salt stress, simulating an irrigated vineyard environment.
  • The findings revealed that "Tebaba" manages salt stress through effective metabolic adjustments rather than sodium accumulation, suggesting that incorporating "Tebaba" genes into commercial grapevines could be more beneficial than using it as a rootstock alone.

Article Abstract

Soil salinity is progressively impacting agriculture, including viticulture. Identification of genetic factors rendering grapevine (Vitis vinifera L.) resilience that can be introgressed into commercial varieties is necessary for safeguarding viticulture against the consequences of global climate change. To gain insight into the physiological and metabolic responses enabling salt tolerance, we compared a salt-tolerant accession of Vitis sylvestris from Tunisia, "Tebaba", with "1103 Paulsen" rootstock widely used in the Mediterranean. Salt stress was slowly increased, simulating the situation of an irrigated vineyard. We determined that "Tebaba" does not sequester sodium in the root but can cope with salinity through robust redox homeostasis. This is linked with rechanneling of metabolic pathways toward antioxidants and compatible osmolytes, buffering photosynthesis, such that cell-wall breakdown can be avoided. We propose that salt tolerance of this wild grapevine cannot be attributed to a single genetic factor but emerges from favorable metabolic fluxes that are mutually supportive. We suggest that introgression of "Tebaba" into commercial varieties is preferred over the use of "Tebaba" as a rootstock for improving salt tolerance in grapevine.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/plphys/kiad304DOI Listing

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