Characterization of Membrane Lipids of Higher Plants Different in Salt-tolerance

The membrane lipids of six higher plants that differ in salt tolerance were analyzed and compared. The root lipids increased in a ratio of glycolipid/phospholipid with increasing salt- tolerance. A similar increase in the ratio was observed with increasing external salinity when halophytic orach and salt-sensitive cucumber were exposed to varying salinity, although the latter plant was limited to only a little increase. Measurements of ion-transport rates with artificial lipid membranes revealed that the root lipids from a salt-resistant plant formed a more permeable membrane than those from a salt-sensitive species. It was found that the membrane permeability was related to the glycolipid/phospholipid ratio in the membrane lipids, where the glycolipids were stimulative and the phospholipids were repressive for ion-flow. These different effects of the two lipid classes may be attributed to their molecular species and head groups.