Journal article

Rice suspension cultured cells are evaluated as a model system to study salt responsive networks in plants using a combined proteomic and metabolomic profiling approach

D Liu, KL Ford, U Roessner, S Natera, AM Cassin, JH Patterson, A Bacic

Proteomics | Published : 2013

Abstract

Salinity is one of the major abiotic stresses affecting plant productivity but surprisingly, a thorough understanding of the salt-responsive networks responsible for sustaining growth and maintaining crop yield remains a significant challenge. Rice suspension culture cells (SCCs), a single cell type, were evaluated as a model system as they provide a ready source of a homogenous cell type and avoid the complications of multicellular tissue types in planta. A combination of growth performance, and transcriptional analyses using known salt-induced genes was performed on control and 100 mM NaCl cultured cells to validate the biological system. Protein profiling was conducted using both DIGE- an..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Funding Acknowledgements

This work was supported by grants from ARC, GRDC, South Australia Government, Australian Centre for Plant Functional Genomics (ACPFG) through The University of Melbourne, The University of Queensland and the University of Adelaide. We specially thank Neil Shirley (ACPFG, Adelaide) for his help with QPCR analysis and Terra Stark (Metabolomics Australia) for metabolomics analysis.