EDITORIAL
published: 20 November 2020
doi: 10.3389/fpls.2020.618273
Editorial: Ion Homeostasis in Plant
Stress and Development
José M. Mulet 1*, Francisco Campos 2 and Lynne Yenush 1
1
Instituto de Biología Molecular y Celular de Plantas, Universitat Politècnica de València-Consejo Superior de Investigaciones
Científicas, Valencia, Spain, 2 Departamento de Biología Molecular de Plantas, Instituto de Biotecnología, Universidad
Nacional Autónoma de México, Cuernavaca, Mexico
Keywords: ion homeostasis, plant stress and development, drought stress, halotropism, chloride, plant hormones,
calcium channels, purple acid phosphatases
Editorial on the Research Topic
Ion Homeostasis in Plant Stress and Development
Edited and reviewed by:
Gerald Alan Berkowitz,
University of Connecticut,
United States
*Correspondence:
José M. Mulet
[email protected]
Specialty section:
This article was submitted to
Plant Membrane Traffic and Transport,
a section of the journal
Frontiers in Plant Science
Received: 16 October 2020
Accepted: 28 October 2020
Published: 20 November 2020
Citation:
Mulet JM, Campos F and Yenush L
(2020) Editorial: Ion Homeostasis in
Plant Stress and Development.
Front. Plant Sci. 11:618273.
doi: 10.3389/fpls.2020.618273
Ion homeostasis is a dynamic process and a fundamental requirement for all organisms. Many
different minerals are required for essential biochemical processes, but accumulation of these
elements may be toxic. Thus, all living organisms have developed efficient systems to acquire
and store these elements and maintain their cytosolic and organellar concentrations within a
specific physiological range that allows for normal development. This requirement has determined
the establishment of evolutionarily-conserved, robust molecular mechanisms to maintain these
homeostatic concentrations and avoid toxicity, while at the same time, permitting dynamic
responses to environmental changes. Some of these responses are conserved among different
kingdoms, while others are specific for plants (Mulet et al., 2013). The presence of high ionic
concentrations in soil, especially of sodium chloride, is a great conundrum for the plant’s
physiology, as cells must maintain potassium concentration high and sodium low inside the
cytoplasm, usually against high sodium concentrations in the soil. Although saline habitats are
common and diverse, halophytic plants comprise less of 2% of all gymnosperms (Flowers and
Colmer, 2015). On the other hand, salt tolerant species have emerged in at least 100 different species
of flowering plants (Santos et al., 2016). Some authors have suggested that salt tolerance may be a
macroevolutionary self-destructive trait, as it is gained frequently, but also is lost easily by reversal
or extinction (Bromham et al., 2020). This is probably due to the high amount of energy required to
maintain the ion homeostasis under stress conditions, which hampers normal plant development
and compromises the response to other environmental cues, the adaptation to new conditions or
the competition with other species for the ecological niche.
Ion homeostasis determines pivotal functions for plant biology, such as the compensation of
the negative charges of macromolecules, maintenance of electroneutrality, and the establishment
of cell turgor and volume. Also, a proper ion potential in the internal media or in organelles is
required for enzyme activity and other essential functions like protein synthesis. Ions are also
essential components of biomolecules, such as chlorophyll or hemoglobin, and they play a key
role at the whole plant level by contributing to vital processes, such as stomatal aperture which
controls transpirational water loss, plant desiccation and cell elongation. In addition to direct effects
of ions on plant cell physiological function and homeostasis, a proper membrane potential (inside
negative) is maintained through the maintenance of specific cation and anion gradients across the
cell membrane.
ION HOMEOSTASIS UNDER DROUGHT STRESS
Drought is the main limiting factor for agricultural yield worldwide. The problem is increasing due
to the rising water demand to feed a growing population and the effects of climate change, especially
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Editorial: Ion Homeostasis in Plants
in drought-prone arid and semi-arid areas (Mahajan and
Tuteja, 2005). In response to drought, plants activate a defense
mechanism devoted to the accumulation of water and potassium.
The mini-review presented by Nieves-Cordones et al. on this
issue, summarizes the role of potassium and chloride in water
deficit resistance in the different plant organs. High activity
of K+ and Cl− uptake systems and a large root system are
desirable traits. In the leaf, K+ and Cl− allow for an efficient
osmotic adjustment of leaf cells, which is a key process to retain
water within cells. Efficient stomatal closure prevents excessive
water loss and is achieved by K+ and Cl− release from guard
cells. In fact, it has been postulated that proteins regulating
potassium uptake channels in the guard cells may be targets for
biotechnological strategies against drought (Locascio et al., 2019).
The study of chloride homeostasis has often been neglected due
to the importance of potassium, which is the major ion in the
cytoplasm, but Cl− has a specific beneficial effect in leaf cells by
giving rise to larger cells (with higher water storage capacity),
lower stomatal conductance and higher mesophyll conductance
to CO2 (Dreyer and Uozumi, 2011; Colmenero-Flores et al.,
2019). Therefore, water use efficiency is increased under proper
Cl− nutrition.
that the cyclic nucleotide-gated channel CNGC12 is a calcium
transporter regulated by calmodulin.
Calcium homeostasis also affects phosphate homeostasis.
Phosphate is an essential nutrient and, in many environments, it
is the most limiting element. Plants have developed a complex
network for the uptake and internal transport of phosphate,
which is required for the synthesis of pivotal molecules such as
DNA, RNA, phospholipids, and is involved in signaling networks
regulated by phosphorylation/dephosphorylation. Calcium, like
phosphate, is essential, but calcium has a high affinity for
phosphate, producing calcium phosphate. Therefore, phosphate
and calcium levels must be tightly regulated to avoid the
formation of these insoluble salts. The report by Farhadi
et al., gives a new insight into the phosphate homeostasis, as
describes a new compensatory mechanism between two purple
acid phosphatases is described, pointing out the importance
of studying these proteins as part of a network and not as
individual phosphatases.
OUTLOOK
We have gained a lot of knowledge regarding the function
and regulation of proteins that participate in ion homeostasis
and their role in salt and drought stress. Future investigation
must address important questions related to the relationship
between ion homeostasis and growth, development and stress
response pathways. In addition, it is important to expand our
understanding of the molecular mechanisms through which
hormones controlling growth and development impact the
regulation of ion homeostasis. For example, studies on the role of
auxins or strigolactones in ion homeostasis have frequently been
neglected due to the major and well-characterized role of ABA
in ion homeostasis during stress responses. This Research Topic
has contributed to these aspects by offering two minireviews
which discuss the role of hormones in the regulation of ion
homeostasis during growth and stress, and with two research
papers that describe the co-regulation of proteins involved
in Ca2+ and phosphate homeostasis. These studies help to
shed light on the complex regulatory networks underlying ion
homeostasis. We hope future investigation will help to solve
the many questions that remain unanswered in this field, which
is increasingly important for the successful development of the
biotechnological approaches needed for effective agriculture in
the face of climate change.
HORMONAL ASPECTS OF ION
HOMEOSTASIS
The mini-review by Nieves-Cordones et al. also highlights the
role of abscisic acid (ABA) for maintaining ion homeostasis
under drought stress. ABA triggers K+ and Cl− retention in
roots, induces changes in root system architecture by enhancing
lateral root growth and inhibiting primary root growth, and
is induces stomatal closure. However, less is known about the
interplay between ABA and other hormones, specifically auxin,
during stress. This important aspect is the focus of the other minireview included in this topic, written by Szepesi. Halotropism is
a recently discovered movement phenomena that allows plants
to avoid high salt by root bending, or in halophytic plants,
remodel their root system architecture to find the optimal
sodium concentration in the soil (Galvan-Ampudia et al., 2013).
Auxin and ABA are essential for this process. Ethylene may
also participate promoting growth under adverse conditions. It
has also been shown that application of strigolactone hormones
causes changes in root system architecture, therefore suggesting
a role in halotropism (Ruyter-Spira et al., 2011).
AUTHOR CONTRIBUTIONS
CALCIUM AND PHOSPHATE
HOMEOSTASIS
JMM wrote the first draft, based on it LY wrote the second draft,
and then FC wrote the final version, which was later revised and
approved by JMM and LY.
At the center of the interplay between ion homeostasis and
hormonal signaling, we find calcium homeostasis. Calcium acts
as an intracellular second messenger during hormonal responses.
For instance, during halotropism, elevated Na+ triggers the
activation of a phospholipid signaling pathway by increasing
Ca2+ levels in the cytoplasm (Korver et al., 2020). In the paper by
Zhang et al., a new player in calcium homeostasis is unveiled. In
this article, the authors use electrophysiological studies to show
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FUNDING
This paper was funded by grants PID2019-104054GB-I00
and RTC-2017-6468-2-AR from the Spanish “Agencia Estatal
de Investigación”.
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Editorial: Ion Homeostasis in Plants
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Conflict of Interest: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the
absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a
potential conflict of interest.
Copyright © 2020 Mulet, Campos and Yenush. This is an open-access article
distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY).
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No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these
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