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First published online April 27, 2007; 10.1104/pp.107.099820 Plant Physiology 144:1598-1611 (2007) © 2007 American Society of Plant Biologists OPEN ACCESS ARTICLE
A Reassessment of the Function of the So-Called Compatible Solutes in the Halophytic Plumbaginaceae Limonium latifolium1,[W],[OA]Unité Mixte de Recherche 6026 Interactions Cellulaires et Moléculaires (D.G., C.D., R.L., F.R.L., A.B.) and Unité Mixte de Recherche 6553 Ecosystèmes, Biodiversité, Evolution (A.A.), Université de Rennes 1, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Campus de Beaulieu, 35042 Rennes cedex, France
The compatible solute hypothesis posits that maintaining osmotic equilibrium under conditions of high salinity requires synthesis of organic compounds, uptake of potassium ions, and partial exclusion of NaCl. To assess whether osmotic adaptation in Limonium latifolium proceeds according to this hypothesis, a comprehensive analysis of solute accumulation during NaCl treatments was conducted. Determination of prevailing inorganic ions and establishment of the metabolic profiles for low Mr organic substances revealed that contrary to the mentioned hypothesis the major contributors to osmolarity were constituted by inorganic solutes. Independent of salinity, only 25% of this osmolarity resulted from organic solutes such as Suc and hexoses. Proline (Pro), -alanine betaine, and choline-O-sulfate were minor contributors to osmolarity. Compatible inositols also occurred, especially chiro-inositol, characterized for the first time in this species, to our knowledge. Principal component analysis showed that only a limited number of metabolic reconfigurations occurred in response to dynamic changes in salinity. Under such conditions only sugars, chiro-inositol, and Pro behave as active osmobalancers. Analysis of metabolic profiles during acclimatization to either mild salinity or nonsaline conditions showed that organic solute accumulation is predominantly controlled by constitutive developmental programs, some of which might be slightly modulated by salinity. Osmolarity provided under such conditions can be sufficient to maintain turgor in salinized seedlings. Compartmental analysis of Pro and -alanine betaine in leaf tissues demonstrated that these solutes, mainly located in vacuoles under nonsaline conditions, could be partly directed to the cytosol in response to salinization. Thus they did not conform with the predictions of the compatible solute hypothesis.
Due to either water loss or induced processes responsible for enhancement of the total number of osmotically active particles, higher plants are able to increase their osmolarity in response to hyperosmotic conditions. Accumulation of such particles, collectively termed osmolytes, contributes to osmotic adjustment (OA), which is needed for survival and resuming of growth at after-stress recovery. Active OA has been recognized as one of the key determinants of tolerance to salinity and other osmotic stresses encountered by higher plants (Jamaux et al., 1997
Primarily OA could be achieved with ions such as K+, Na+, NO3, or Cl when available in the root environment (Shabala and Lew, 2002
Some of the organic osmolytes that do not disrupt proper functioning of organelles and are assumed to be preferentially located in nonvacuolar compartments of plant cells have also been termed compatibles solutes (Brown and Simpson, 1972
This model for intracellular compartmentation of inorganic ions and other osmolytes in salinized tissues of higher plants has emerged from the pioneering works of Flowers (1972)
The biochemical diversity of organic osmolytes accumulated by the salt-excreting halophyte Plumbaginaceae (Larher and Hamelin, 1975
Suc and Inositol Isomers as Major Organic Osmotica in Shoots and Roots of L. latifolium The amounts of soluble low Mr organic compounds and those of Na+, K+, Cl, and NO3 were first determined in seedlings grown for 10 d in the presence of either 300 mM NaCl or the reference medium. As anticipated from relevant signals in the 1H-NMR spectrum performed on a crude extract obtained from shoots of control seedlings (Supplemental Fig. S1), nitrogenous substances known to accumulate in the Plumbaginaceae were also detected in this species. However, a number of other prominent signals were contained in this spectrum, suggesting the presence of other abundant organic solutes.
The amounts of major components and that of some of their precursors are shown in Table I
. Gln was the most abundant nitrogenous solute in shoots and roots of control seedlings, whereas Pro became quantitatively prominent in those treated with NaCl. The betaines choline-O-sulfate (COS) and
Assuming that all these organic substances behave as ideal osmotic particles, we calculated their relative efficiency in lowering the osmotic potential according to Munns and Weir (1981 -AB accounted for less than 12% of this potential and Pro for less than 10%, even under saline conditions. Organic acids that contributed significantly to this calculated potential in control seedlings were found to decrease in those treated with NaCl. Finally, in spite of the remarkable contribution of Suc, more than 75% of the total osmotic potential that could arise from both types of osmolytes resulted from inorganic particles.
Variation of the Metabolic Phenotype along the Salt-Free Recovery Process in Shoots and Roots of L. latifolium following a Saline Treatment To further investigate whether or not reconfiguration of metabolite profiles could take place in response to salinization and, if so, whether it was reversible, 3-month-old seedlings were treated for 10 d with 300 mM NaCl and then transferred to a reference NaCl-free medium for 10 d of recovery. In parallel, control seedlings were kept on the nonsaline reference medium. As described in "Materials and Methods," shoots and roots from bulks of seedlings were collected at different stages of the experiment (three representative bulks per stage), and were separately analyzed for 30 organic solute contents suspected to be involved in adaptive or stress responses, and two inorganic ones (Na+ and K+): stage 1, after 10 d NaCl treatment; stages 2 and 3, after 5 and 10 d of recovery in a salt-free reference medium, respectively. Also, three parallel bulks of shoots and roots of non-salt-treated seedlings kept in the reference medium were collected and analyzed at each of the three corresponding stages to serve as control. Principal component (PC) analysis (PCA) was then employed to examine the differences and similarities among 38 controls, salt-treated, and salt-free recovering seedling samples, respectively, based upon the variation of their metabolic phenotypes represented by 32 variable solutes.
The first two PC axes cover 60.1% of the total variation (PC1: 41.8%; PC2: 18.3%). Projection of the initial variable solutes in the plot defined by the first axes is presented in Figure 2A
. This figure shows that the solutes do not vary in the same way and variously contribute to the significance of the PCs. Therefore, the positive part of the first component is strongly correlated with the highest values of a group of organic solutes, such as COS,
Relative to the same informative PC1 and 2, samples are clearly separated on both sides of PC1 into two main assemblages (Fig. 2B) corresponding to either the shoot or the root samples, regardless of their treatment and stage of development. According to the significance of the axes, the shoot samples share a metabolic profile characterized by the highest concentrations of COS and -AB, m-Inos, and c-Inos, and at a lower level of some amino acids such as Met, Asp, X1, and Cho; at the opposite, the profiles of the root samples are characterized by the highest values of the amino acids Cys, Val, -Ala, Ile, and Arg, and most particularly of those for Glc, Fru, and partly Suc, and vice versa. While PC1 unambiguously distinguishes organs (shoots versus roots), it is obvious that the second PC (PC2) primarily discriminates groups of shoot and root samples according to their treatment, and secondarily to their developmental stage (1, 2, or 3). As can be observed from Figure 2B, both shoot and root samples are scattered along PC2, in decreasing order, from the control seedlings, with highest levels of Gln, Glu, and K+ (and secondarily Trp and Lys) in the positive direction, to the salt-treated samples, accumulating the highest contents of Pro, Na+, and Suc in the opposite direction. In between are ranked the salt-free recovering samples, those recovering for 5 d closer to the salt-treated samples, and the ones recovering for 10 d closer to the control seedlings. Reversal to pretreatment (nonsaline) conditions was faster in shoots than in roots. Three classes of metabolites arose, according to the changes observed in their concentrations, in response to successive up- and downshift osmotic stresses. Typical changes for a restricted number of them are plotted in Figure 3 . The first class (Fig. 3A) consisted of substances like Pro, Suc, Fru, Glc, c-Inos, and m-Inos, which were found to increase in response to salinization and to decrease after transfer to nonsaline conditions. They behave as true osmoregulators. The second one (Fig. 3B) is composed of substances whose amounts were inversely regulated. Thus Gln, Glu, and Asp decreased under saline conditions and increased in response to nonsaline ones. The last one (Fig. 3C) was constituted by the betaines, which exhibited amounts that were not significantly adjusted in response to changing experimental conditions.
Osmolyte Deposition as Related to Either Constitutive Processes or Salt-Induced Adjustments
To assess changes of the metabolic phenotype related to either vegetative growth or to stress responses shoots and roots of L. latifolium seedlings have been examined during acclimatization to either mild salinity or nonsaline conditions. Accordingly, 6-d-old seedlings, sowed in the same time and conditions, were divided in two sets, and each of them was grown hydroponically for 54 d in presence of either 100 mM NaCl or the nonsaline reference medium. Three individuals were collected from each of the salt-treated set and the reference set at eight different developmental stages (13, 20, 27, 35, 42, 48, 55, and 60 d after sowing), resulting in a sampling of 48 individuals. Shoots and roots from each of these individuals were separately analyzed for 27 solute contents (including Na+ and K+). The whole data set obtained, including 96 shoot and root samples (from 48 individuals) and 27 variables, was analyzed by PCA, regardless of their organ, their age, or their treatment status. The results based on the two most informative first PC (containing 50% of the total variation) are presented in Figure 4
. The contribution of the 27 initial variables to the significance of the two first PC axes is shown in Figure 4A. The positive part of the first axis is mainly defined by the highest values of Ile, Cys, Gln, Glc, Fru, and at a lower level by other solutes, such as Lys, Arg, Trp, Val, Orn, and Leu. The negative part is clearly defined with the highest amount of c-Inos, Met, m-Inos,
More accurate survey of changes in concentration of some remarkable solutes involved actively or not in OA provides additional insights into this general pattern. It was first observed (Fig. 5, A and B ) that total carbohydrates (Glc, Fru, Suc) plus cyclitols increased with age in shoots and roots whereas free amino acids decreased (Fig. 5, C and D), this being independent of growth conditions. It was also apparent (Fig. 6 ) that during the whole period of acclimatization investigated, Suc behaved as a major solute in shoots of both types of seedlings and it accumulated progressively in roots. On the contrary, the amount of c-Inos remained rather low and stable in roots when it increased in shoots especially under saline conditions. In parallel, m-Inos decreased in shoots under both conditions of growth while it remained quite low and stable in roots. The Pro level, which remained high in shoots of treated seedlings during the whole experiment, was twice as low in shoots of control seedlings. Higher amounts of Pro also occurred in roots of treated seedlings especially at the first stages of vegetative growth. Changes in Gln concentration of shoots mimicked those previously mentioned for total amino acids, the values being higher in control seedlings. -AB was already present at high levels in young seedlings and it tended to increase in older ones but these changes did not seem to be related to growth conditions. The same trends were observed for COS since its amount in shoots of both types of seedlings was found to be close to 60 and 80 µmol g1 dry weight in 35- and 60 d-old seedlings, respectively.
As shown in Figure 7 , only the net accumulation of Pro increased to some extent in salinized seedlings whereas those of -AB and c-Inos evolved in relationship with growth. As expected for salt-treated seedlings, Na+ accumulated during vegetative growth and this occurs at the expense of K+. As a consequence, the absolute amount of both cations behaved similarly in control and salt-treated seedlings.
Changes in Subcellular Distribution of Pro and -AB as Related to Sudden Salinization
To specify the role(s) of
This study carried out with seedlings of the halophyte L. latifolium aimed first to investigate the profile of the major organic solutes occurring in its tissues and to assess their contribution to adjustment of osmolarity under saline conditions. Second, we tried to discriminate substances that actually behave as true osmoregulatory solutes from those that participate to the same function through passive processes. We have also analyzed the conditions of deposition of these solutes during acclimatization to either mild salinity or nonsaline conditions. Finally, we performed compartmental analysis on shoot tissues from seedlings treated or not with 300 mM NaCl to investigate cellular localization of Pro and -AB. The metabolic data generated were expected to provide relevant arguments to assess the suitability of the compatible solute theory in this plant species.
Collectively the solutes determined in this study gave rise to a calculated osmotic potential close to 1.5 and 3 Mpa, respectively, in roots and shoots, which was in keeping with results obtained for L. latifolium and its interspecific hybrid with Limonium caspia by Alarcon et al. (1999)
Stability of the profiles of major organic solutes all along the whole period of vegetative growth investigated indicates that long-term saline treatment did not induce (or suppress) the production of special solutes. However, regardless of the presence of NaCl, the free sugars + cyclitols fraction increased regularly while that of free amino acids decreased. Such imbalance between carbon and N metabolites may restrict relative growth rate and therefore play a part as a determinant of salt tolerance (Schulze and Chapin, 1987
Owing to robust metabolic analyses performed on seedlings subjected to saline treatments, we were able to discriminate between substances that are constitutively accumulated and those that behaved as stress metabolites. Exploratory data analysis by PCA revealed that the amount of certain metabolites that increased in response to salinization showed an opposite trend in response to transfer to nonsaline conditions (Figs. 2 and 3). Such biochemical flexibility is assumed to provide vectorial homeostasis in solute concentrations that allow proper functioning of primary metabolism as well as fine control of the amount of solutes needed to maintain osmolarity. Some of these changes could mimic those of perfect osmobalancers but we have to concede that they could also reflect fluctuating rates of solute consumption related to inhibition and resumption of growth. Independent of the cause underlying the observed effect, it could be inferred that free sugars and c-Inos apparently behave as ideal osmolytes. In performing such function Pro seems to have a minor importance because it accumulated only in relatively low amounts in response to saline upshift. The reversible changes observed in the Pro level might merely be related to successive damage and repair at the mitochondrial step of Pro oxidation by the Pro dehydrogenases that control the Pro/pyrroline-5-carboxylate cycle operating between the cytosol and the mitochondria (Larher et al., 2007
In control plants both solutes were already abundant and preferentially associated with the vacuolar fraction. This apportionment was found to change in response to salinization. Thus salt-induced enhancement of the Pro amount benefits the cytosol and this might result from activation of the Glu pathway of Pro synthesis operating at this level (Hare et al., 1998
However, this scheme results from a speculative oversimplification deduced from analysis of complex crude extracts coming from a great variety of plant cells exhibiting specific anatomical and physiological attributes hidden by the destructive procedure used. In addition, the concentrations shown in Table II remain rough estimations because the changes that could be induced by salinity at the fraction of the total cell volume represented by the vacuolar and the nonvacuolar compartments have not been assessed. Salt-induced plasticity at this level has been reported for cultured plant cells derived from both halophytic and glycophytic species. Thus salinity has been shown to induce a rapid increase in vacuolar volume associated with activation of H+-ATPase and vacuolar acid phosphatase without any change in the total cell volume (Mimura et al., 2003
As a whole, organic solutes under investigation in this study are obviously involved in the colligative properties of cellular solutions where they are located. However some of them, exhibiting amounts hardly osmoregulated, could be also regarded as secondary plant products associated (or not) with metabolic dysregulations. We are rather prone to believe they might result from active responses intended to exert counteracting effects against damages directly or indirectly induced by NaCl. Such apparent discrepancy between the relevance of metabolic processes involved might have implications in deciphering the metabolic determinants of salt tolerance of halophytes.
First it appears that the ability to allocate a range of primary metabolites to strive against damages caused by salt stress and finally contribute to plant survival under salt stress could reflect traits of paramount importance in salt tolerance. Because these substances were produced by L. latifolium without any induction by salinity they actually behave as antistress metabolites preaccumulated to caution the whole plant against the osmotic stresses that could be encountered under salt marsh conditions. Similar metabolic traits have already been reported for Thellungiella halophila (Gong et al., 2005
Second, the physiological relevance of the special betaines occurring in L. latifolium deserves further investigations because some of their properties documented in this study do not conform to the premises of the compatible solute hypothesis. Our results are indeed at odds with those related for example to the putative function of GB in halophytic Chenopodiaceae (Tipirdamaz et al., 2006 Third, it became evident that detailed studies of the metabolic phenotypes expressed in halophytic plants subjected or not to saline conditions, using reliable analytical procedures and suitable statistical tools, deserve to be used more thoroughly to specify the actual interest of the compatible solute hypothesis to predict the role played by solutes accumulated. More realistic pictures should emerge from metabolomics approaches that can apprehend on the long range changes the amount of a wider range of metabolites occurring in both salinized and nonsalinized plants that could reflect genuine adaptive processes or stress responses as well as secondary metabolic pathways of unknown functions.
Finally, if the various organic osmolytes accumulated in tissues of L. latifolium accounted for the decline in water potential regardless of their compartmentation, this does not inevitably result from osmoregulatory responses that mitigate the damages provoked at the cellular level by salinity. With respect to the so-called popular compatible solutes consisting of Pro,
Plant Material and Growth Conditions
Seeds of Limonium latifolium were provided by Ball Ducrettet. They were germinated (sowing day) for 4 d in 90 mm petri dishes on paper humidified with Hoagland solution (Hoagland and Arnon, 1938 For recovery experiments after saline treatments, 3-month-old plants grown individually as described above were divided into two sets. One set was transferred to the reference medium and the other to this medium added with 300 mM NaCl. After 10 d of salt treatment, treated plants were separated in two batches: one was immediately harvested and the second transferred to fresh growth medium free of NaCl for 10 more days and then collected. Root and leaf samples from control or salt-treated plants were taken at the 0th, 10th, 15th, and 20th days from onset of the experiment. For the long-term treatment at mild salinity, seedlings (6-d-old) were divided into two sets. The first one, referred as control, was kept on the same medium and the second, referred as salinized, was transferred to the Hoagland solution added with 100 mM NaCl. Seedlings were harvested at sowing and 4, 6, 10, 13, 20, 27, 35, 42, 48, 55, and 60 d later.
Experiments were set up in a completely randomized design. Three replicates were done for each treatment. For each replicate, five to 20 plants were harvested and pooled. Plants were harvested at midday at the indicated dates. Roots and shoots were separately collected, thoroughly rinsed with distilled water, dried, and immediately plunged in liquid nitrogen. Frozen tissues were then lyophilized for 72 h until dry, noting that the tissues were maintained in their frozen state through evaporative cooling during the lyophilization process. The dried material was powdered and stored at 80°C until extraction. Dried crushed materials (up to 30 mg) were suspended in 96% ethanol containing 50 µM norleucine and 50 µM
Sugars, Sugar Alcohols, and Organic Acids Derivatization and Analysis by Gas Capillary Chromatography
Amino Acids Derivatization and Analysis by HPLC
Quaternary Ammonium Compounds Determination by 1H-NMR
Na+ and K+ concentrations in appropriately diluted extracts were determined directly using a flame photometer (Jenway). Chloride has been determined through the colorimetric titration method of Schoenfeld and Lewellen (1964)
Nonaqueous density gradient fractionation of leaves was performed according to Gerhardt and Heldt (1984)
The deconvolution approach described by Riens et al. (1991)
Two main experiments were conducted in this work to study the pattern of the metabolic phenotype changes: (1) along a salt-free recovery process after a saline treatment, and (2) during acclimatization to saline or nonsaline conditions, in shoots and roots of L. latifolium seedlings. These experiments resulted in large data sets, one containing 38 samples and 32 variable solutes, and the other including 96 samples and 27 variables. Usual statistical parameters and diagrams (mean values, SEs, relative percentages, histograms, two-way scattered diagrams) have been used to characterize and estimate the variation of each metabolite, employing Minitab software (Windows version 13.31, Minitab Inc.).
Additionally, a multivariate approach, employing the PCA method, has been performed to give a synthetic view of the data and to identify the pattern and trends of the physiological behavior shown by L. latifolium in response to salinization or acclimatization, as revealed by changes of the metabolite profile following the treatments. PCA is a powerful statistical method, which allows estimation of overall similarity and difference levels among analyzed samples, based on a multidimensional data set (Sneath and Sokal, 1973
The following materials are available in the online version of this article.
The authors thank Dr. M. Vaultier for allowing them to use the gas chromatography-mass spectrometry system of the department Chimie Synthèse Electrosynthèse Organiques of the University of Rennes 1 (France) as well as B. Plunian for technical assistance. They are grateful to Dr. P. Guenot (Centre Régional de Mesures Physiques de l'Ouest, University of Rennes 1, France) for helpful discussions and suggestions regarding metabolite analysis. They gratefully thank Dr. A. Weber (Michigan State University) and Dr. R.J. Neil Emery (Trent University, Ontario, Canada) for their useful comments on the manuscript and help with the english version. Thanks are also due to C. Monnier and N. Raimbeaud (University of Rennes 1, France) for technical assistance. Received March 20, 2007; accepted April 6, 2007; published April 27, 2007.
1 This work was supported by the French Ministry of National Education and Technological Research (to D.G.).
2 Present address: Department of Plant Biology, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI 48824. The author responsible for distribution of materials integral to the findings presented in this article in accordance with the policy described in the Instructions for Authors (www.plantphysiol.org) is: Alain Bouchereau (alain.bouchereau{at}univ-rennes1.fr).
[W] The online version of this article contains Web-only data.
[OA] Open Access articles can be viewed online without a subscription. www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.107.099820 * Corresponding author; e-mail alain.bouchereau{at}univ-rennes1.fr; fax 330223236915.
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