OsCBL10 negatively regulates salt tolerance at seedling stage in rice
Friday, 29-05-2026 | 14:39
Soil salinity increasingly endangers global rice production. Although CBL-CIPK complexes are known to decode salt-induced Ca2+surges to activate ion transporters and antioxidant pathways, the in vivo role of rice OsCBL10 remains unknown, leaving a critical gap in Ca2+-mediated salt-tolerance mechanisms. In this study, we demonstrate that OsCBL10 is a tonoplast-localized Ca2+sensor that is transcriptionally up-regulated by salinity and most highly expressed in anthers and salt-stressed shoots.
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OsCBL10 negatively regulates salt tolerance at seedling stage in rice
OsCBL10 negatively regulates salt tolerance at seedling stage in rice
Soil salinity increasingly endangers global rice production. Although CBL-CIPK complexes are known to decode salt-induced Ca2+surges to activate ion transporters and antioxidant pathways, the in vivo role of rice OsCBL10 remains unknown, leaving a critical gap in Ca2+-mediated salt-tolerance mechanisms. In this study, we demonstrate that OsCBL10 is a tonoplast-localized Ca2+sensor that is transcriptionally up-regulated by salinity and most highly expressed in anthers and salt-stressed shoots.
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