Xiaojiang Zheng
Hubei University
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Featured researches published by Xiaojiang Zheng.
Plant Physiology | 2008
Jian Sun; Shaoliang Chen; Songxiang Dai; Ruigang Wang; Niya Li; Xin Shen; Xiaoyang Zhou; Cunfu Lu; Xiaojiang Zheng; Zanmin Hu; Zengkai Zhang; Jin Song; Yue Xu
Using the scanning ion-selective electrode technique, fluxes of H+, Na+, and Cl− were investigated in roots and derived protoplasts of salt-tolerant Populus euphratica and salt-sensitive Populus popularis 35-44 (P. popularis). Compared to P. popularis, P. euphratica roots exhibited a higher capacity to extrude Na+ after a short-term exposure to 50 mm NaCl (24 h) and a long term in a saline environment of 100 mm NaCl (15 d). Root protoplasts, isolated from the long-term-stressed P. euphratica roots, had an enhanced Na+ efflux and a correspondingly increased H+ influx, especially at an acidic pH of 5.5. However, the NaCl-induced Na+/H+ exchange in root tissues and cells was inhibited by amiloride (a Na+/H+ antiporter inhibitor) or sodium orthovanadate (a plasma membrane H+-ATPase inhibitor). These results indicate that the Na+ extrusion in stressed P. euphratica roots is the result of an active Na+/H+ antiport across the plasma membrane. In comparison, the Na+/H+ antiport system in salt-stressed P. popularis roots was insufficient to exclude Na+ at both the tissue and cellular levels. Moreover, salt-treated P. euphratica roots retained a higher capacity for Cl− exclusion than P. popularis, especially during a long term in high salinity. The pattern of NaCl-induced fluxes of H+, Na+, and Cl− differs from that caused by isomotic mannitol in P. euphratica roots, suggesting that NaCl-induced alternations of root ion fluxes are mainly the result of ion-specific effects.
Plant Cell and Environment | 2010
Jian Sun; Meijuan Wang; Mingquan Ding; Shurong Deng; Meiqin Liu; Cunfu Lu; Xiaoyang Zhou; Xin Shen; Xiaojiang Zheng; Zengkai Zhang; Jin Song; Zanmin Hu; Yue Xu; Shaoliang Chen
Using confocal microscopy, X-ray microanalysis and the scanning ion-selective electrode technique, we investigated the signalling of H(2)O(2), cytosolic Ca(2+) ([Ca(2+)](cyt)) and the PM H(+)-coupled transport system in K(+)/Na(+) homeostasis control in NaCl-stressed calluses of Populus euphratica. An obvious Na(+)/H(+) antiport was seen in salinized cells; however, NaCl stress caused a net K(+) efflux, because of the salt-induced membrane depolarization. H(2)O(2) levels, regulated upwards by salinity, contributed to ionic homeostasis, because H(2)O(2) restrictions by DPI or DMTU caused enhanced K(+) efflux and decreased Na(+)/H(+) antiport activity. NaCl induced a net Ca(2+) influx and a subsequent rise of [Ca(2+)](cyt), which is involved in H(2)O(2)-mediated K(+)/Na(+) homeostasis in salinized P. euphratica cells. When callus cells were pretreated with inhibitors of the Na(+)/H(+) antiport system, the NaCl-induced elevation of H(2)O(2) and [Ca(2+)](cyt) was correspondingly restricted, leading to a greater K(+) efflux and a more pronounced reduction in Na(+)/H(+) antiport activity. Results suggest that the PM H(+)-coupled transport system mediates H(+) translocation and triggers the stress signalling of H(2)O(2) and Ca(2+), which results in a K(+)/Na(+) homeostasis via mediations of K(+) channels and the Na(+)/H(+) antiport system in the PM of NaCl-stressed cells. Accordingly, a salt stress signalling pathway of P. euphratica cells is proposed.
Tree Physiology | 2009
Jian Sun; Songxiang Dai; Ruigang Wang; Shaoliang Chen; Niya Li; Xiaoyang Zhou; Cunfu Lu; Xin Shen; Xiaojiang Zheng; Zanmin Hu; Zengkai Zhang; Jin Song; Yue Xu
Using the non-invasively ion-selective microelectrode technique, flux profiles of K(+), Na(+) and H(+) in mature roots and apical regions, and the effects of Ca(2+) on ion fluxes were investigated in salt-tolerant poplar species, Populus euphratica Oliver and salt-sensitive Populus simonii x (P. pyramidalis + Salix matsudana) (Populus popularis 35-44, P. popularis). Compared to P. popularis, P. euphratica roots exhibited a greater capacity to retain K(+) after exposure to a salt shock (SS, 100 mM NaCl) and a long-term (LT) salinity (50 mM NaCl, 3 weeks). Salt shock-induced K(+) efflux in the two species was markedly restricted by K(+) channel blocker, tetraethylammonium chloride, but enhanced by sodium orthovanadate, the inhibitor of plasma membrane (PM) H(+)-ATPase, suggesting that the K(+) efflux is mediated by depolarization-activated (DA) channels, e.g., KORCs (outward rectifying K(+) channels) and NSCCs (non-selective cation channels). Populus euphratica roots were more effective to exclude Na(+) than P. popularis in an LT experiment, resulting from the Na(+)/H(+) antiport across the PM. Moreover, pharmacological evidence implies that the greater ability to control K(+)/Na(+) homeostasis in salinized P. euphratica roots is associated with the higher H(+)-pumping activity, which provides an electrochemical H(+) gradient for Na(+)/H(+) exchange and simultaneously decreases the NaCl-induced depolarization of PM, thus reducing Na(+) influx via NSCCs and K(+) efflux through DA-KORCs and DA-NSCCs. Ca(2+) application markedly limited salt-induced K(+) efflux but enhanced the apparent Na(+) efflux, thus enabling the two species, especially the salt-sensitive poplar, to retain K(+)/Na(+) homeostasis in roots exposed to prolonged NaCl treatment.
Plant Cell and Environment | 2012
Jian Sun; Chunlan Zhang; Shurong Deng; Cunfu Lu; Xin Shen; Xiaoyang Zhou; Xiaojiang Zheng; Zanmin Hu; Shaoliang Chen
We elucidated the extracellular ATP (eATP) signalling cascade active in programmed cell death (PCD) using cell cultures of Populus euphratica. Millimolar amounts of eATP induced a dose- and time-dependent reduction in viability, and the agonist-treated cells displayed hallmark features of PCD. eATP caused an elevation of cytosolic Ca(2+) levels, resulting in Ca(2+) uptake by the mitochondria and subsequent H(2) O(2) accumulation. P. euphratica exhibited an increased mitochondrial transmembrane potential, and cytochrome c was released without opening of the permeability transition pore over the period of ATP stimulation. Moreover, the eATP-induced increase of intracellular ATP, essential for the activation of caspase-like proteases and subsequent PCD, was found to be related to increased mitochondrial transmembrane potential. NO is implicated as a downstream component of the cytosolic Ca(2+) concentration but plays a negligible role in eATP-stimulated cell death. We speculate that ATP binds purinoceptors in the plasma membrane, leading to the induction of downstream intermediate signals, as the proposed sequence of events in PCD signalling was terminated by the animal P2 receptor antagonist suramin.
Plant Signaling & Behavior | 2009
Jian Sun; Shaoliang Chen; Songxiang Dai; Ruigang Wang; Niya Li; Xin Shen; Xiaoyang Zhou; Cunfu Lu; Xiaojiang Zheng; Zanmin Hu; Zengkai Zhang; Jin Song; Yue Xu
The ability of a plant to maintain an ionic homeostasis is crucial in plant salt tolerance. Direct evidence based on data from the non-invasive measurement of ion fluxes would not only offer new insight about the function of the transporter but also provide a whole plant approach for dissecting salt adaptation mechanisms. Here, we review some reports using the ion-selective microelectrodes to characterize the net ion fluxes of tissues or cells.
Trees-structure and Function | 2010
Xiuying Ma; Lin Deng; Jinke Li; Xiaoyang Zhou; Niya Li; Decai Zhang; Yanjun Lu; Ruigang Wang; Jian Sun; Cunfu Lu; Xiaojiang Zheng; Eberhard Fritz; Aloys Hüttermann; Shaoliang Chen
During a 30-day period of increasing salinity, we examined the effects of NaCl on leaf H+-ATPase and salinity tolerance in 1-year-old plants of Populus euphratica Oliv. (salt resistant) and P. popularis 35–44 (P. popularis) (salt sensitive). Electron probe X-ray microanalysis of leaf mesophyll revealed that P. euphratica had a higher ability to retain lower NaCl concentrations in the cytoplasm, as compared to P. popularis. The sustained activity of H+ pumps (by cytochemical staining) in salinised P. euphratica suggests a role in energising salt transport through the plasma membrane (PM) and tonoplast. Salt-induced alterations of leaf respiration, ATP content and expression of PM H+-ATPase were compared between the two species. Results show that P. euphratica retained a constant respiratory rate, ATP production and protein abundance of PM H+-ATPase (by Western blotting) in salt-stressed plants. P. euphratica was able to maintain a comparatively high capacity of ATP hydrolysis and H+ pumping during prolonged salt exposure. By contrast, the activity and expression of PM H+-ATPase were markedly decreased in P. popularis leaves in response to salt stress. Furthermore, NaCl-stressed P. popularis plants showed a marked decline of respiration (70%) and ATP production (66%) on day 30. We conclude that the inability of P. popularis to transport salt to the apoplast and vacuole was partly due to the decreased activity of H+ pumps. As a consequence, cytosolic ion concentrations were observed to be comparatively high for an extended period of time, so that cell metabolism, in particular respiration, was disrupted in P. popularis leaves.
The Open Forest Science Journal | 2009
Niya Li; Chunyan Li; Shaoliang Chen; Yu Chang; Yunxia Zhang; Ruigang Wang; Yong Shi; Xiaojiang Zheng; Eberhard Fritz; Aloys Hüttermann
In this study we investigated the effects of short term (ST, 24 h, 100 mM NaCl) and long term (LT) salinity (4 weeks, NaCl increased weekly from 100 to 400 mM) on leaf abscisic acid (ABA), calmodulin (CaM) and activity of antioxidant enzymes (superoxide dismutase, SOD; peroxidase, POD) in 1-year-old seedlings of two mangrove species, Kandelia candel and Bruguiera gymnorrhiza. The gas exchange and salt (Na + and Cl ) accumulation upon a LT stress were compared between the two species. Results show that stomatal conductance, net photosynthetic rates and unit transpiration rates of the two species were significantly decreased by LT salinity and the inhibitory effects were more pronounced in K. candel, especially at high saline conditions. Leaf Na + and Cl concentrations in both species steadily increased with increasing the period of salt stress, but K. candel exhibited a higher capacity for salt exclusion. Malondialdehyde content and membrane permeability did not significantly increase in the two mangroves during the prolonged period of salt exposure. NaCl up-regulated ABA, CaM and activity of SOD and POD in the two species, but different trends were observed. (1) Upon a ST stress, leaf ABA in K. candel increased rapidly and reached the peaking levels after 4 h, and activity of antioxidant enzymes correspondingly increased to the peaking values after 8 hours of stress. In B. gymnorrhiza leaves, SOD and POD activity exhibited a coincident increase after the initiation of salt exposure and leaf CaM markedly increased after 8 hours. (2) Under a LT salinity, K. candel maintained high levels of leaf ABA and POD activity, whereas B. gymnorrhiza retained high CaM levels during the period of stress, and SOD activity was markedly elevated at high salinity (400 mM NaCl). Therefore, we conclude that the two mangrove species were able to up-regulate the activity of antioxidant enzymes to avoid excess reactive oxygen species and the subsequent oxidative stress despite a NaCl buildup in salinised plants. The elevation of antioxidant enzymes is likely associated with the salt- induced rise of ABA and CaM since the acceleration effect of NaCl on antioxidant enzymes were inhibited by ABA synthesis inhibitor, tungstate (sodium form) and CaM inhibitor, trifluoperazine (TFP).
Plant Molecular Biology | 2010
Mingquan Ding; Peichen Hou; Xin Shen; Meijuan Wang; Shurong Deng; Jian Sun; Fei Xiao; Ruigang Wang; Xiaoyang Zhou; Cunfu Lu; Deqiang Zhang; Xiaojiang Zheng; Zanmin Hu; Shaoliang Chen
Plant Cell Tissue and Organ Culture | 2010
Jian Sun; Lisi Li; Meiqin Liu; Meijuan Wang; Mingquan Ding; Shurong Deng; Cunfu Lu; Xiaoyang Zhou; Xin Shen; Xiaojiang Zheng; Shaoliang Chen
Scientia Horticulturae | 2010
Yong Shi; Jing Li; Jie Shao; Shurong Deng; Ruigang Wang; Niya Li; Jian Sun; Hua Zhang; Huijuan Zhu; Yunxia Zhang; Xiaojiang Zheng; Dazhai Zhou; Aloys Hüttermann; Shaoliang Chen