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AMF-induced salinity tolerance in durum wheat is associated with transcriptomic modulation of the Cation/Calcium Exchanger 1 (CCX1).

Zavarshani N, Zarei M, Shamloo-Dashtpagerdi R, Dadkhodaie A, Shirazi SS

Mycorrhizal Networks

When you dig into a handful of healthy garden soil, you're holding millions of mycorrhizal fungal threads — and these same threads can silence the molecular panic response that salt-stressed wheat plants blast at full volume just to survive, pointing toward a soil-health approach to farming land that irrigation has slowly poisoned with salt.

Scientists found that a beneficial root fungus — the kind naturally present in healthy, undisturbed soil — helps wheat plants cope with salty conditions by quieting a specific gene the plant normally cranks up under salt stress. When the fungus was present, wheat grew bigger, kept its mineral levels balanced, and suffered far less damage. It seems the fungus takes over some of the plant's ion-balancing workload, so the plant doesn't have to burn as much energy fighting the salt on its own.

Key Findings

1

572 genes were differentially expressed between AMF-treated and non-AMF salt-stressed wheat plants, with the ion-transport gene TdCCX1 emerging as the top hub gene by network centrality.

2

AMF inoculation — especially with Rhizophagus irregularis — significantly improved shoot and root biomass, phosphorus uptake, and K⁺/Na⁺ balance under salinity stress.

3

TdCCX1 expression was strongly upregulated by salt stress alone but was significantly suppressed in AMF-colonized plants, suggesting the fungus reduces the plant's dependence on energy-costly internal ion transport.

chevron_right Technical Summary

Beneficial soil fungi (AMF) help durum wheat survive salty soils partly by dialing down a key ion-transport gene, TdCCX1, reducing the energy the plant must spend managing salt damage. This transcriptomic study identifies a molecular mechanism that could guide breeding of salt-tolerant wheat and inform how mycorrhizal inoculation is used in saline agricultural soils.

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Abstract Preview

Salinity is a major abiotic stress that severely constrains durum wheat (Triticum turgidum subsp. durum) productivity. Although the beneficial effects of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) on plant...

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hub This connects to 11 other discoveries — Durum wheat mycorrhizal-networks, soil-health, crop-improvement +2 more 5 related articles

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