| Genetic
Change Could Make Crops Thrive on Salty Soils
Scientists have
genetically modified plants to tolerate high levels of salt
offering a potential solution to growing food in salty
soils.
The researchers inserted a gene to remove
salt in the form of sodium ions from water taken
up by the plant before it reaches the leaves, where it does
most damage.
The research was published in The Plant
Cell this month (7 July).
High salinity reduces crop yields on irrigated
land, where one-third of the world's food is produced, and
in semi-arid regions such as the Middle East.
Mark Tester, a fellow at the Australian
Centre for Plant Functional Genomics, and colleagues developed
a GM salt-tolerant Arabidopsis thaliana plant by introducing
a gene into its root that diverts sodium ions into the roots
rather than the shoots.
Plants minimise this salt accumulation
naturally but the gene decreased salt levels in the
shoots by up to two-thirds.
"We've used genetic modification
to amplify the process, helping plants to do what they already
do but to do it much better," says Tester.
The main challenge is applying the technique
to crop plants. He says the Arabidopsis gene has already performed
well in rice, and the researchers are currently analysing
rice, barley and wheat plants containing their own versions
of the gene.
Tester says the freely-available technology
can also alter the accumulation of other chemicals, with implications
for human nutrition, plant growth and phytoremediation
using plants to soak up pollutants from soil all of
which are important for developing countries.
Rowan Sage, professor of physiological
plant ecology at the University of Toronto, Canada, cautiously
welcomes the news, saying: "This is a promising approach
to mildly improving salinity tolerance in crops."
"However, I am sceptical it will
produce true [salt-tolerant] crops. Sodium exclusion is but
one salinity tolerance mechanism. If a plant has a very strong
sodium exclusion mechanism
there are costs in terms
of reduced growth potential," he says.
"One might be able to grow rice on
a salty soil, but the yield may not be worth it. The big advantage
will be on mildly salty soils where the yield is repressed
in non-tolerant crops."
Source: SciDev.Net
Date: 22 July 2009

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