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Proc Indian Natn Sci Acad 80 No. 5 December 2014 pp. 1013-1023 Printed in India. DOI: 10.16943/ptinsa/2014/v80i5/47970 Review Article The Possible Overlap Between Salinity and Mechanical Challenges in Porteresia coarctata SONALI SENGUPTA Division of Plant Biology, Bose Institute, P-1/12, CIT Scheme, VIIM, Kankurgachhi, Kolkata 700 054, India (Received on 05 May 2014; Revised on 01 October 2014; Accepted on 30 October 2014) In nature, certain abiotic stresses constitutively acting on plants often go unrecognized. Mechanical stress is one of such stresses, which is manifested on a plant as low-spectrum pressure on the cell membrane due to wind, soil hindrance, gravity or wave current. Although all plants face constant threats from mechanical stress, some ecosystems are more prone to receive such stress. Mangrove vegetation is daily inundated by saline tidal waves that pose a serious threat to the soil binding force of forest undergrowth. Porteresia coarctata is a mangrove rice, which being wild, is avaluable germplasm for bioprospecting of genes and proteins that may confer salt-tolerance to domestic rice. However, P. coarctata is important from ecological point of view as its salt and mechanical stress tolerance is an integral part of the mangrove ecosystem. It is not possible to understand the basic biology of P. coarctata without an ecological perspective. The subterranean part of Porteresia provides a high anchorage and binds soil, thus stabilizing the mangrove vegetation. The root system architecture of Porteresia is unique, with a rhizome and rhizoid-like rootlets. The root system interacts with both salinity and mechanical threat directly, and thus it is important to understand the molecular ecophysiology of Porteresia root and rhizomes to understand the nature of overlap between salinity and mechanical stress in a mangrove ecosystem, which is still elusive. Key Words: Porteresia coarctata; Salinity; Mechanical Stress; Mangrove; Rice Introduction Major environmental stresses that influence a plant’s life often occur together in its natural habitat. Such co-occurrence of stresses may elicit similar defence reactions or adaptations and may express similar group of transcription factors and shared group of genes. Sometimes the stresses share physical or chemical components as well. For convenience of discussion, stress overlap can be reduced into certain reaction types as shown in Fig. 1. For example, salinity and dehydration may have a common physical element of osmotic shift; that may be termed as Interaction Tier A; sharing astress component. Salinity may co-occur with submergence in coastal ecosystem or industrial sewage washed cultivation system, which is co-occurrence of unrelated stressors, termed as Interaction Tier B (Fig. 1). There is also a third type of reaction, wherein the molecular response to one stress may use same signalling pathways or cascades of reactions for one or more biotic or abiotic stresses commonly known as molecular cross talk and termed Interaction Tier C in Fig. 1. In an ecological niche, all such interactions shape a plant’s mode of survival and its position in the ecosystem. Moreover, anthropogenic inputs, such as cultivation or eradication could play as an invasive pressure (Interaction Tier D in Fig. 1) at all levels of such interactions, and define molecular ecophysiology of a plant. This review will address all three tiers of interactions between salinity and mechanical stress with special reference to wild rice, Porteresia *Author for Correspondence: E-mail: [email protected] 1014 Fig. 1: Interaction types in molecular ecophysiology of a plant. For details, refer the text coarctata. Porteresia, being a mangrove associate and a salt-tolerant bioprospecting model for rice, is extremely important in rice stress biology and biotechnological improvement of rice. Environment-Genotype Interactions in Mangrove Vegetation Mangrove plants occupy a special niche in the ecosystem with plants of specialized adaptation. In a mangrove habitat, the interactions among organism and environment are critical for optimal survival. The environmental forces operative on coastal or shoreline mangrove forests are multifarious. They include salinity, flooding and anaerobic condition.Mangrove vegetation typically shows two types of plants, one group represents the true mangroves, whereas the other group consists of mangrove associates (Wang et al., 2010).“Exclusive”, “obligate” or “true” mangrove species are not able to grow outside the mangrove environment whereas ‘nonexclusive’, facultative or mangrove associates may occupy any terrestrial or aquatic habitat outside the mangrove ecosystem (Lacerda et al., 2002; Parani et al., 1998; Tomlinson, 1986). Differences between them are not well-defined and there are several fringe species with debated position. Non-exclusive mangroves are Sonali Sengupta known to shift seamlessly between a saline and nonsaline environment.They may also show certain energetically cheap adaptations compared to complex anatomical adaptations found in true mangroves, for example, vivipary and pneumatophores. Status of Porteresia coarctatais somewhat ambiguous in this regard. The Sunderban mangrove area is one of the largest mangrove forests washed with the distributaries of the Ganges, and forms the coast fringe of Bay of Bengal. The soil of estuarine area is highly saline and faces daily saline water submergence from high and low tides. The major vegetation of true mangrove trees and shrubs in Sundarban area are accompanied by a large proportion of the mangrove associates; which include some monocots belonging to Cyperaceae and Poaceae. Porteresia coarctata, a Salt-Tolerant Wild Rice Porteresia coarctata is a wild rice that has been receiving great attention for its unique salt tolerance quality and its close relation to rice. As proposed by Sengupta et al. (2010), Porteresia is a potent model for bioprospecting of genes and proteins for raising salt tolerant rice through biotechnological approaches. However, the domesticated rice Oryza sativa and the wild rice Porteresia show significant differences. The native Porteresia vegetation flourishes in a range of 100 to 500mM of NaCl, which is comparable to seawater. Many native landraces of rice are also known to tolerate some extent of salinity, but never establish in a mangrove eco-system. Although suggested to be facultative, it has always been difficult to establish a completely non-saline formation of Porteresia and no such natural establishment has been observed. This prompted us to term Porteresia as salt loving rice or halophilic rice, not a true facultative; and a fringe species in context of mangrove-like property. We have observed that Porteresia grows better in a saline soil, shows greater vegetative growth and propagation, has a higher biomass and a high photosynthetic rate, in comparison to control (non-saline)conditions (Sengupta and Majumder, 2009). It prefers vegetative reproduction in the saline mode, and the occasional spikelets produce almost no viable seeds. In absence The Possible Overlap Between Salinity and Mechanical Challenges in Porteresia coarctata of salt in soil, it is possible to force Porteresia to enter in a sexual reproduction mode and to produce a few viable seeds occasionally (Sengupta et al., unpublished) . In our previous observations,the establishment of an endophytic fungus was seen favourable for the establishment of a Porteresia vegetation. Ecological and Taxonomical Position of Porteresia Porteresia is a tetraploid monotypic genus (2n = 4x = 48) (Sengupta and Majumder, 2010). The largest continuous vegetation of Porteresia occurs at Sundarban delta that stretches along coastal West Bengal and Bangladesh, covering about a million hector of land. The majority of the flora are trees, but the land is held by a large proportion of under growth of shrubs and herbs. Porteresia forms a vast population in the coastline, binds the soil and prevents the coastline from erosion. Both the east and west shore lines of India, including Orissa, Sundarban and Chennai coast forests are manifested with Porteresia coarctata. However, the vegetation is limited to the soil that gets inundated twice a day with saline river or seawater of 20 to 40 dSm-1 (Jagtap et al., 2006). It is clearly indicated that Porteresia is a valuable source of genes and proteins, that bear significant homology to rice. Therefore, genomic, transcriptomic and/or proteomic studies of Porteresia should offer valuable bioresource for transgenic crop science. However, the ambiguity in its physiology very often contradicts part of its identity as a halophytic wild (non-domesticated) model for rice which is curious. Porteresia coarctata act as pioneer species in the succession of mangrove formation along the estuaries of India (Jagtap et al., 2006). Though of great significance to estuarine and deltaic environments, it is poorly understood ecologically. The temporal and spatial patterns in the growth and biomass production of P. coarctata were evaluated at selected localities along the banks of Mandovi estuary, Goa, India (Jagtap et al., 2006; Sengupta and Majumder, 2010). Considering its ecological significance i.e. tolerance to wide salinity range and adaptability to sandy and muddy substrate, P. coarctata is of a great value in protection, conservation and restoration of estuarine and creek 1015 ecosystems in India. The habitat of this plant in India has been categorized under ecologically sensitive zone, and protected vide CRZ (Coastal Regulation Zone) Act of 1990, along with mangroves. However, Porteresia habitat continue to be under constant threat from ever increasing anthropogenic demands, and hence warrants strict implementation of CRZ rule for their protection (Sengupta and Majumder, 2010). Under such an ecological conditions, Porteresia faces challenges from salt, physiological dehydration, submergence and mechanical stress. Never domesticated or cultivated, the anthropogenic input to the vegetation is unclear. In the coastline population of Sundarbans, it is widely used as a fodder which is an important reason of its eradication. In the coastlines of Sundarban area it is called Dhani ghas. This plant shows an elaborate rhizomatous system absent in other domestic rice species, but bears similarity to the rhizomatous stem of a weedy rice, Oryza longstaminata. Like Porteresia, weedy rice has a robust vegetative growth, but it prefers a non-saline habitat and the seeds of weedy rice are not dehiscent. On the other hand, seeds of Porteresia are highly dehiscent and not viable. Oryza genome is made up of 24 species, of which only two are cultivated and domesticated (Table 1). There are 10 genome types, of which diploids are AA through GG, and 4 are allote traploids. The speciality of Porteresia lies in the fact that the HHKK genome type in Porteresia is special, as none of the genome complements (HH or KK)are present in the diploid genome groups of rice. The taxonomical position of P. coarctata Tateoka (= O. coarctata) is discussed in detail by Sengupta and Majumder (2010). The inclusion of this plant in Oryza species is highly debated; though based on the genetic, anatomical and morphological data, several scientists have emphasized the positioning of Porteresia in the Oryza genus (Tateoka, 1965; Flowers et al., 1990; Finch et al., 1997; Garcia, 1992; Latha et al., 1998; Ge et al., 1999). Though Ge et al. (1999) suggested a more ancient origin of Porteresia than O. sativa, the phylogenetic reconstruction of rice clearly shows that the closest ancestral species to KK (P. coarctata) genome are DD and HH genomes. Comparison of Monoculm1 (MOC1) genomic regions suggests that Sonali Sengupta 1016 Table 1: Origin and genome types of Oryza genus analysed so far (Adapted and modified from Ge et al., 1999) S.No. Species Genome Accession Habit Status Origin 1 P. coarctata (Syn. O. coarctata) HHKK (?) MSSR007 Halophyte Wild India 2 O. sativa AA IR64 Glycophyte Domesticated IRRI 3 O. glaberrima AA 100792 Glycophyte Domesticated Senegal 4 O. nivara AA 106185 Glycophyte Wild India 5 O. rufipogon AA 105908 Glycophyte Wild Thailand 6 O. longistaminata AA 103886 Glycophyte Co-domesticated Tanzania 7 O. punctata BB 100937 Glycophyte Wild Ghana 8 O. officinalis CC 101116 Glycophyte Wild Philippines 9 O. rhizomatis CC 105448 Glycophyte Wild SriLanka 10 O. minuta BBCC 100880 Glycophyte Wild Philippines 11 O. eichingeri CC 105408 Glycophyte Wild SriLanka 12 O. malampuzhaensis BBCC 105328 Glycophyte Wild India 13 O. alta CCDD 100025 Glycophyte Wild Surinam 14 O. grandiglumis CCDD 105156 Glycophyte Wild Brazil 15 O. latifolia CCDD 105139 Glycophyte Wild Guatemala 16 O. australiensis EE 105272 Glycophyte Wild Australia 17 O. brachyantha FF 101232 Glycophyte Wild Sierraleone 18 O. longiglumis HHJJ 105146 Glycophyte Wild Indonesia 19 O. ridleyi HHJJ 100820 Glycophyte Wild Thailand 20 O. granulata GG 101084 Glycophyte Wild Srilanka 21 O. meyeriana GG 106473 Glycophyte Wild Philippines 22 O. indandamanica unknown 105694 Glycophyte Wild India O. coarctata (or P. coarctata) has a unique genome type (Lu et al., 2009). Although most Oryza genome types were determined by traditional genome or molecular analysis (Li et al., 1964), O. coarctata was designated as an HHKK genome type based solely on its phylogenetic position (Ge et al., 1999). When the HH subgenomes in O. coarctata (HHKK) and O. ridleyi (HHJJ) were compared, no homology was observed in the intergenic regions. These findings contrast with other subgenome comparisons that show homologous sequences and shared transposable elements in intergenic regions, such as the BB and CC genome types (Lu et al. 2009). Moreover, the gene sequence differences between the predicted HH subgenome types in O. coarctata and O. ridleyi were more different from AA and BB genome types. Both of these subgenomes were estimated to have diverged from each other ~11 Ma. Hence, HH subgenomes in O. coarctata and O. ridleyi are likely to belong to different genome types. To avoid confusion Lu et al. (2009) even suggested O. coarctata should be designated as KKLL (Sengupta and Majumder, 2010). Morphology of the Plant To understand the relation of ecological status of Porteresia to its genetic content, morphology of the plant is noteworthy. Discussed in greater detail in our earlier communication (Sengupta and Majumder, 2010), morphological uniqueness in Porteresia over other rice plants briefly include salt hairs, elaborate rhizomatous system, rhizoid like rootlets and dehiscent seeds on scanty panicles. The morphology and physiology of Porteresia are discussed in detail in Sengupta and Majumder (2010) (Fig. 3). The root The Possible Overlap Between Salinity and Mechanical Challenges in Porteresia coarctata and rhizome architecture of Porteresia remains largely unaddressed in literature,however it probably represents the most significant part of the physiology of Porteresia. The Subterranean System of Porteresia As mentioned previously, Porteresia has a distinctly different underground system compared to that of rice. The rhizomes are essentially runners (Fig. 3D), with high deposition of mechanical tissue. From the nodes of the rhizome, leaf buds arise that are the progenitors of new leafy shoots (Fig. 3E). Scale leaves cover and protect the nodal meristematic regions from harsh environment as in salt-marsh grasses (Cyperaceae). Thin rootlets emerge from nodes of rhizomes (Fig. 3) which may serve the purpose of absorption and feeble anchorage. The root system hardly penetrates the soil deeper than a foot (roughly) in Sundarban area, so we assume the roots may not have a true root structure, and the rhizome has fullest ability to absorb water and nutrients as well as providing anchorage to the substratum. The root system seems extremely important for the study of the biology of this mangrove associate. The plant exhibits a profound and special system of salt exclusion from leaves, comparable to salt marsh grasses. Originally described by Flowers et al. (1990) and later detailed by Sengupta and Majumder (2009), two types of salt hairs are present on Porteresia leaves with different mechanisms of salt exclusion. Both are unicellular trichomes, the glands on the upper surface of leaf excrete salt, which, at high concentrations of substrate salinity forms crystals on the upper surface. On the other hand, hairs on the lower surface are prone of shedding themselves off at higher salt concentration, and regenerate at low salt concentration. This is a typical salt-inundated estuarine adaptation, where saline water level constantly fluctuates. To keep at continuum with the diurnal variation of salt concentration in the medium, the mechanism of such shedding of glands and regrowing must be a very successful strategy. The cellular sodium ion concentration and sodium: potassium ratio in leaf remains low (Sengupta and Majumder, 2009). According to Flowers et al. (1990), 1017 Porteresia plants accumulate Na+ and Cl-ions in leaves, but maintain a Na:K ratio as low as 0.7 even after 6 weeks of growth in 25% artificial saline water (ASW) where the Na:K ratio was 34. This points towards an ability to leach out the salts as well as an ability to take up saline solution through soil (Bal and Dutt, 1986). To achieve this, a very high root pressure is required. To survive such high pressure, root cells must have a much robust protection/ tolerance mechanism against salt. Unfortunately, root adaptation against salt is relatively less covered in previous research. The Genomic and Proteomic Studies The genomic and proteomic studies so far done in Porteresia have been discussed by different workers (Sengupta and Majumder, 2009; Garg et al., 2013). Porteresia has been vigorously used as a valuable bioresource for salt-tolerant gene pool in the last decade (Majee et al., 2004; Sengupta et al., 2008). The massive advancement of technology and the integration of computation in biological sciences has changed our concept and modified our scope of looking at the plant from a holistic viewpoint. The leaf proteome and EST profiles were analyzed in detail (Sengupta and Majumder, 2009). Their research shows that the plant can keep a normal, or even vigorous growth profile under high salt stress. A differential leaf proteomic profile was generated by Sengupta and Majumder (2009) in which a very small subset of proteins related to salt tolerance in Porteresia were identified. Proteins identified were involved in several processes such as : protection of the photosystems from oxidative/hyperionic damage and maintaining the ETS function; enhancing available catalytic sites of the main carbonassimilating enzyme Rubis CO under low stromal CO2 concentration; shunting some active oxygen species to photorespiratory carbon oxidation (PCO) cycle; savings of overall energy costs by favouring low-energy pathways; synthesizing osmotically active compounds; detoxifying the system by removing stress-generated alcohols; controlling the transcriptional regulatory network through stressinduced transcription factors; enhanced synthesis of chaperones to uphold normal protein structure that 1018 can be altered during high-stress regime; maintaining cellular integrity through supplying high amount of cell wall components and thus retaining normal to robust growth under stress (Sengupta and Majumder 2009). The identified proteins can well be functionally related to the physiology of Porteresia under stress (Fig. 2A, Sengupta and Majumder, 2009). In a subtractive cDNA profiling, a vast metabolic alteration in Porteresia leaves in the presence of salt stress was indicated (Fig. 2B, unpublished data from the laboratory). More recent next-generation transcriptome enrichment (Garg et al., 2013) indicates a close functional overlap of submergence and salinity tolerance trait in Porteresia, as is expected of mangrove habitat plants. However, Garg et al. (2013) and Sengupta and Majumder (2009) made an observation that the similarity of Porteresia transcripts to rice transcripts was not very high. Candidate gene based studies showed that a large number of Porteresia genes are similar to Rice genes. On the other hand, a more comprehensive scenario obtained from proteomic and genomic studies highlights the fact that many of the salt-stress induced transcripts in Porteresia do not have any homologues or orthologues in rice or wild rice; and they are not even anotated (Sengupta et al., 2009; Garg et al., 2013). It has also been shown by Sengupta et al. 2008 that genes like Inositol methyl Transferase, which has not been reported to be present in rice, are present in Porteresia. Many hypothetical proteins are identified in Porteresia that may represent a completely different cluster of genes absent in rice and also important in salt-tolerance physiology of the plant. We assume that these genes probably contribute profoundly to the special physiological traits of the plant, including high mechanical strength. The biological processes and the anatomical specialties are closely related to the restricted habitat of the plant; and one may conclude that the unknown or hypothetical proteins/transcripts belong to the KK genome complement of Porteresia, that is of untraced origin within rice genotypes. The extended families of salt-induced transcription factors reported by Garg et al., (2013) are rather significant. Most of the TFs are upregulated during salinity stress and the transcriptional activity Sonali Sengupta Fig. 2: A. A summary of proteomic responses of Porteresia coarctata (adapted from Sengupta and Majumder, 2009). Diagrammatic representation of the salt-induced molecular functions and proteins identified through proteomic analysis: in Porteresia coarctata to be upregulated under salinity stress. The orange boxes and shapes represent the proteins and functions identified. Major abbreviations used are: UDPG UDP-glucose, sus: sucrose synthase, CS1: cellulose synthase 1, GS1: glutamine synthase, SU IV subunit IV, MIPS L-myo-inositol-1-P synthase, ADH: alcoholdehydrogenase, HSP heat shock protein, FNR ferredoxin-NADP oxidoreductase, FD ferredoxin, cp chloroplast. B. Functional grouping of salt-induced ESTs from Porteresia coarctata is repressed under submergence stress (Garg et al., 2013). Among the salinity upregulated transcription factors, NAC, MYB and WRKY are indicated, whereas among the submergence-upregulated transcription factors, bZIP, bHLH, HSF and AP2EREBP families may play a major role. Incidentally NAC and MYB are the most important TFs associated with lignin deposition in plants and so are bZIP and The Possible Overlap Between Salinity and Mechanical Challenges in Porteresia coarctata B A C D E H F G I J K Fig. 3: A-K A. Porteresia plant; B. IR-64 Rice potted plant; C. Plantlets of Porteresia emerging from underground rhizomes D. Plantlets maintained in culture. Black arrow shows the rhizome. E. Multiple buds emerging from rhizome that matures into shoots-shown by a black circle. F. Rice root system G. Porteresia roots. H. Leaf transverse section of Porteresia (figure not to scale) I, J. Light microscopic view of salt hairs (figure not to scale), K. Scanning Electron Microscope view of the salt hairs bHLH (Dharmawardhana et al., 2010). A close link can be assumed between the mechanical stress tolerance, and saline submergence tolerance in this plant which is discussed in the next section. Table 2 presents all the genes identified from Porteresia till date, most of which are reported to be upregulated during salt stress. A Hitherto Unexplored Relation to Mechanical Stress Mechanical stress is considered a complex form of pressure-induced stress. It has often been suggested that the first mechanical stress early microorganisms 1019 faced was that of osmotic stress. In a mangrove vegetation, the impact of tide is ecologically enormous on the pioneering undergrowth species, which remain under noticed. Species like Porteresia, forms a dense rhizomatous mat and gives support to soil, which helps in preventing soil erosion during high and low tides of salt-water. Its rhizoid-like roots are able to invade through comparatively restricted air spaces present amongst the soil particles in estuarine clay. They do not penetrate further in soil as sea tides are the major source of water. Robust vegetative propagation and high mechanical strength of rhizomes is a prerequisite for such pioneering species. Also, the subterranean part acclimatizes to the interplay of salt, mechanical and submergence stress, which seems to be Porteresia’s natural ecological adaptation. Despite its high vegetative growth ability, it has never been reported from a nonsaline ecosystem, unless artificially introduced. This suggests that Porteresiais a natural halophile, although not an obligate. Its unique rhizomatous system may account both for its salinity and mechanical stress tolerance, probably more than the aerial parts. Unfortunately, the ecology of root and rhizome system architecture was never studied with respect to genetic basis in Porteresia coarctata, as has been studied for the shoot system (Sengupta and Majumder, 2009). Overlap Between Salinity and Mechanical Stress Cellular dehydration and osmotic adjustment brings a decrease in ambient osmotic potential. This also brings in mechanical stress, degree of which changes with the volume of cell cytoplasm. Salt treated plant cells show reorganization of cytoskeleton and changes in abundance of several cytoskeletal and cytoskeleton-associated proteins. Such structural proteins also play a major role in maintaining mechanical strength of plant cells. Proteins having such shared role are actin, tubulin; profilin—an actinbinding protein involved in polymerization and depolymerization of actin filaments; kinesin—a microtubule motor involved in microtubuledependent transport processes, especially during cell cycle and cytokinesis (Pang et al., 2010; Askari et al., 2006; Wang et al., 2009; Dooki et al., 2006; Sonali Sengupta 1020 Table 2. Genes/Loci so far reported from Porteresia coarctata in NCBI Gene/Locus Accession no. Reference (Article/Gene) Oryza coarctata Na+/H+ antiporter (NHX1) Porteresia coarctata serine-rich protein (PcSrp) Porteresia coarctata V-ATPase subunit c (PVA1) Porteresia coarctata translational initiation factor eIF1 Porteresia coarctata inositol 1-phosphate synthase (PINO1) JQ782416 AF110148 AF286464 AF380357 AF412340 Porteresia coarctata histone H3 AF109910 Porteresia coarctata homeobox protein Porteresia coarctata metallothionein Porteresia coarctata alcoholdehydrogenase I (Adh1) Porteresia coarctata alcohol dehydrogenase II (Adh2) Porteresia coarctata maturase (matK) gene Porteresia coarctata fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase (PcCFR) Porteresia coarctata catA AF384375 AF257465 AF148593 AF148628 AF148669 AF218845 AB014455 Kizhakkedath P et al, 2003) Mahalakshmi S et al., (2006) Planta 224(2), 347-359 Unpublished (Senthilkumar P et al., 2000) Unpublished (Rangan L et al., 2001) Majee et al., (2004) J. Biol. Chem. 279 (27), 28539-28552 Senthilkumar P et al., (1999) Plant Physiol. 119(2), 806 Rangan L et al., 2001 Padmanaban S et al., 2000 Ge et al., (1999) 96 (25), 14400-14405 Ge et al., (1999) 96 (25), 14400-14405 Ge et al., (1999) 96 (25), 14400-14405 Chatterjee J et al., (2013) PCTOC Iwamoto M et al., (1999) Theor. Appl. Genet. 98, 853861 Goswami L. et al., 2008 Usha B et al., 2007 Guo YL and Ge, S Am. J. Bot. 92(9), 1548-1558 (2005) Guo YL. and Ge, S. (2003) Guo YL and Ge, S. Am. J. Bot. 92(9), 1548-1558 (2005) Luo S et al., Mol. Biol. Evol. (2011) 28(1), 313-325 Oryza coarctata phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC) EU371116 Oryza coarctata metallothionein type 3 (MT3) EU121847 Oryza coarctata tRNA-Leu (trnL) AY792522 Oryza coarctata NADH dehydrogenase subunit 1 (nad1) Oryza coarctata G protein alpha subunit (GPA1) AY792545 Oryza coarctata Rp1-like protein pseudogene (OcRp1) AY507935 AY792544, GU733154 Porteresia coarctata inositol methyl transferase (PcIMT) Oryza coarctata ubiquitin 2 EU240449 HQ340170 Oryza coarctata iron deficiency-responsive cis-acting element-binding factor 1 (IDEF1) Oryza coarctata inositol-1-phosphate synthase (INO1-1) Oryza coarctata inositol-1-phosphate synthase (INO1-2) Oryza coarctata triose phosphateisomerase Oryza coarctata plastid NADH dehydrogenase (ndhF) JN615010 Oryza coarctata plastid ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase (rbcL) Oryza coarctata Ycf3 protein (ycf3) HE577876 Oryza coarctata tRNA-Gly (trnG) FJ908510 Oryza coarctata PSII 10kDa phosphoprotein(psbH) FJ908378 Oryza coarctata ATP synthase beta chain(atpB) gene FJ908106 Monoculm1 locus (Clone a0295K14 Monoculm1, Mlo family protein, aspartic proteinase nepenthesin-1 precursor, microtubule-associated protein MAP65-1a, IQ calmodulin-binding motif family protein,EMB2261 putative, polygalacturonase precursor, exopolygalacturonase precursor, and putative RNA polymerase A(I) large subunit genes) FJ032636 FJ237299 FJ237300 EU371994 HE577878 FJ908683 Sengupta et al., 2008 Philip A et al., (2013) Plant Cell Rep. 32 (8), 11991210 Purohit D et al., (2011) Ray S et al., (2010) Planta 231 (5), 1211-1227 Ray S et al., (2010) Planta 231 (5), 1211-1227 Sengupta S et al., (2008) Aliscioni S et al., (2012) New Phytol. 193 (2), 304-312 Aliscioni S et al., (2012) New Phytol. 193 (2), 304-312 Tang L et al., (2010) Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 54(1), 266-277 Tang L et al., (2010) Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 54 (1), 266-277 Tang L et al., (2010) Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 54 (1), 266-277 Tang L et al., (2010) Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 54 (1), 266-277 Lua F et al., PNAS (2009) 106 (6) 2071–2076 The Possible Overlap Between Salinity and Mechanical Challenges in Porteresia coarctata Fatehi et al., 2012; Sobhanian et al., 2010; Du et al., 2010). In salt stressed rice roots, a plant specific Myosin VIII heavy chain is upregulated that links cytoskeleton to cell wall linker and also activates callose synthase complexes in plasma membrane (Cheng et al., 2009). Remorin, is another plantspecific plasma membrane/lipid raft-associated filamentous protein which might play an important role in cytoskeleton reorganization under salt and mechanical stress (Cheng et al., 2009). A common adaptation towards salinity is enhanced cellulose synthase found in salt-treated Porteresia. This indicates a requirement of plasticity to adapt to an enhanced osmotic pressure (Sengupta and Majumder, 2009) Similarly, an increased level of β-dglucanexohydrolase was found in creeping bentgrass (Xu et al., 2010). Cell-wall associated glycine-rich proteins (GRP) reveal both mechanical and defence properties (Dooki et al., 2006; Du et al., 2010). Changes in cytoskeletal as well as plasma-membrane associated proteins with mechanical functions indicate profound alterations in both intracellular and cell wall architecture of plant cells facing the impacts of an osmotic stress. It is expected that at high tide, Porteresia rhizome and roots would display an array of proteins that will increase the mechanical strength of the subterranean part alongwith providing an osmotic protection. No studies till date has been done with Porteresia growing in its native habitat, in high and low tidal conditions. No effort has been made to identify the effect of mechanical stress on this wild rice. It is important to start such studies and look for mechanical sensors and shared response pathways for coupled salt and mechanical stress in Porteresia coarctata. The knowledge thus obtained can be transferred to cultivated rice for agricultural benefits. Conclusion Under high salinity, or mechanical obstruction, rice root bends away from the saline zone and scans the rhizosphere for a stress-free area (Unpublished data from the laboratory). Regulated by combined function of ethylene and auxin on root growth, such bending is a characteristic of the root system of a plant, and can be used as a tolerance index (unpublished data). 1021 In a saline-water-washed ecosystem, however, bending and escaping is not a feasible route. It is necessary for the subterranean cells to maintain their osmotic pressure. The plant has to survive salinity and the pressure exerted by high and low tides, and thus, the rhizome cells must show osmotic tolerance, and must be mechanically very strong. There are needs of lignification and secondary tissue development in the root. The future research needs to address the rhizome biology of Porteresia; from a genomic, transcriptomic and proteomic aspect and also needs to correlate that with the physiology. Porteresia in its native habitat, i.e. growing as a mangrove undergrowth, covers all the interaction types discussed in Fig. 1. High anthropogenic input without attempts to domesticate renders Porteresia as ecologically vulnerable species. Being the only salt-tolerant wild rice, Porteresia represents a valuable source of genes that may confer stability and tolerance to high-yield sensitive rice and increase the viable agricultural area in the coasts. In our recent work, we observed that the bending and directional growth of rice roots is similar in salt and mechanical stress, with a large set of co-expressing transcripts (Unpublished data from laboratory, Adak et al.). It will be of great interest to know what is the bending and structural alteration pattern that Porteresia root and rhizomes may exhibit in a mangrove ecosystem during high and low tides. It will be of further interest to determine what are the common molecular determinants that dictate the specific physiological characteristics and help the plant to survive the combined salinity, submergence and mechanical challenges in nature. Mechanical stress and salinity, probably has more shared characteristic than acknowledged so far. A mangrove associate like Porteresia present us with ample scope to evaluate such hypothesis. In our earlier work (Sengupta and Majumder, 2009), we dissected the molecular physiology of this plant. Molecular ecophysiology of Porteresia coarctata will provide a more rational insight into the biology of the system and help understand the interplay of mechanical and salinity stress. 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