| Literature DB >> 31787997 |
Adil Khan1, Abdul Latif Khan1, Sowbiya Muneer2, Yoon-Ha Kim3, Ahmed Al-Rawahi1, Ahmed Al-Harrasi1.
Abstract
Salinity stress hinders the growth potential and productivity of crop plants by influencing photosynthesis, disturbing the osmotic and ionic concentrations, producing excessive oxidants and radicals, regulating endogenous phytohormonal functions, counteracting essential metabolic pathways, and manipulating the patterns of gene expression. In response, plants adopt counter mechanistic cascades of physio-biochemical and molecular signaling to overcome salinity stress; however, continued exposure can overwhelm the defense system, resulting in cell death and the collapse of essential apparatuses. Improving plant vigor and defense responses can thus increase plant stress tolerance and productivity. Alternatively, the quasi-essential element silicon (Si)-the second-most abundant element in the Earth's crust-is utilized by plants and applied exogenously to combat salinity stress and improve plant growth by enhancing physiological, metabolomic, and molecular responses. In the present review, we elucidate the potential role of Si in ameliorating salinity stress in crops and the possible mechanisms underlying Si-associated stress tolerance in plants. This review also underlines the need for future research to evaluate the role of Si in salinity stress in plants and the identification of gaps in the understanding of this process as a whole at a broader field level.Entities:
Keywords: antioxidant; reactive oxygen species; salinity; silicon; stress tolerance
Year: 2019 PMID: 31787997 PMCID: PMC6853871 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2019.01429
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 5.753
Figure 1Higher ROS levels in plants under salinity stress conditions. Toxic levels of ROS stunt plant growth by inhibiting the electron transport chain, and photosynthesis in plastids, and by causing mutations in DNA and damaging mitochondria.
Figure 2SOS pathway under salinity stress. The transport of ions across the membrane is conducted by various carrier proteins, e.g. channel proteins, antiporters, and symporters. The ion hemostasis (Na+, K+, and Ca2+) in the cell is crucial for its survival under salt-stress conditions.
Plant categories based on Si uptake capacity (Bakhat et al., 2018).
| > 1.5% Si High accumulator | 1.5%–0.5% Intermediate accumulator | <1.5% of Si Non-accumulator |
|---|---|---|
| Rice | Pumpkins | Tomato |
| Ferns | Cucumber | Pansy |
| Horsetail | Rose | Begonia |
| Lentils | Squash | Grapes |
| Mosses | Chrysanthemums | Sunflower |
| Sugarcane | Soybean | Gerbera |
| Conifers | Zinnia | Petunia |
| Wheat | New Guinea Impatiens | Snapdragon |
| Spinach | Marigold | Geranium |
Figure 3A schematic representation of Si uptake, transport, and accumulation in rice. Silicic acid from the soil solution is absorbed by the roots and transported to the root exodermis by the influx transporter (Lsi1) and subsequently released to the apoplast by the efflux transporter (Lsi2). Subsequently, it enters the root endodermis via Lsi1 and is released to the stele portion of the root via Lsi2. Finally, silicic acid is translocated by an unknown transporter into the xylem and transported to the shoots via the transpiration stream. In the leaves, silicic acid is unloaded by another influx transporter (Lsi6) and localized in the xylem parenchyma cells of leaf sheaths and leaf blades. In the shoots and leaves, Si is transformed from an aqueous form (silicic acid) to solid amorphous silica (SiO2–nH2O) and primarily deposited in the cell walls of different tissues, such as leaf epidermal cells. Modified from Yan et al. (2018).
Effect of exogenous Si on plant stress tolerance mechanisms in various plant species under salinity stress.
| Plant name | Source of silicon | Proposed Si-mediated tolerance mechanisms | Reference |
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| Potassium silicate | The results suggest that Si application hinders the uptake of Na+ and reduces the accumulation of proline, which could be due to the interaction of Si with Na+ uptake and proline accumulation. Hence, Si regulates the uptake of micro- and micronutrients under salinity stress. |
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| Potassium silicate | The higher water levels in Si-treated plants could explain the higher plant growth and could be related to salt dilution within the plant and the consequent mitigation of salt toxicity effects. |
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| Sodium metasilicate | Supplementation of exogenous Si increases the accumulation of polyamines such as spermidine and spermine in cucumber plants. The enhanced polyamine accumulation with silicon application might play a role in modulating the antioxidant defense system and reducing oxidative stress, thus increasing the salt tolerance of cucumber plants. |
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| Sodium metasilicate | The results suggest that Si application increases the levels of osmoregulatory organic solutes and reduces Na+ in sensitive tissue. Furthermore, Si improves plasma membrane activity |
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| Sodium metasilicate | In this study, the authors propose that improved growth in Si-treated plants can be attributed to reduced Na+ uptake, its restricted translocation to the shoots, and enhanced K+ uptake. |
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| Sodium metasilicate | To alleviate the negative effects, silicon positively affects the uptake of nitrogen and antioxidant enzymes. |
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| Sodium metasilicate | Silicon treatment improves the translocation of minerals, and the higher tolerance of salinity is believed to be associated with lower sodium concentrations and higher potassium concentrations. |
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| Potassium silicate | Si increases tolerance by augmenting root hairs, which increase water uptake and consequently mitigates the osmotic imbalance. Si also hinders the uptake of Na+. In addition, Si boosts the antioxidant machinery, which could also be a reason for the increased tolerance in Si-treated plants. |
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| Sodium metasilicate | The suppression effect of salinity stress was alleviated by exogenous Si by increasing the activity of antioxidant enzymes and by restoring the nutrient balance and osmotic potential. |
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| Metasilicic acid | The author suggests that silicon treatment improves growth mainly because of changes in ion accumulation, the enhancement of photosynthesis, and the regulation of antioxidant defense systems enzymes. |
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| Potassium silicate | Exogenous application of Si hinders the uptake of Na+ and significantly improves the K+/Na+ ratio. |
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| Sodium silicate | Silicon improves transpiration rates and leaf water levels by maintaining the water balance. The study also suggests that silicon-mediated changes in root morphology may also account for the increased water uptake of silicon-treated plants. |
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| Metasilicic acid | Exogenous Si reduces the uptake of Na+ and Cl- and boosts the antioxidant machinery in the roots of tomato, which facilitates root growth and hydraulic conductance, and thus improves the water status in the leaves. |
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| Calcium silicate | Si reduces the concentration of Na+ in wheat leaves. Hence, hindering Na+ uptake is a good indicator of salt tolerance in plants. |
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| Sodium metasilicate | Exogenous Si hinders the uptake of Na ions. Furthermore, the study demonstrates the interaction of Si with plant stress-related hormones. In this study, exogenous Si enhances the biosynthesis of ABA while reducing jasmonic acid biosynthesis. The regulation of these hormones under salinity stress is a possible reason for Si-based tolerance. | |
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| Silicic acid | The results suggest that Si can increase the level of endogenous gibberellin and jasmonic acid while reducing salicylic acid. Hence, it is clear from this study that exogenous Si improves the tolerance of plants by regulating the biosynthesis of stress-related phytohormones. |
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| Sodium metasilicate | Silicon enhances leaf erection, which facilitates light penetration and promotes photosynthesis by significantly lowering the production of ethylene, which destroys chlorophyll and reduces plasma permeability. |
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| Silicic acid | Silicon confers salt tolerance on okra, possibly by enhancing the water status, improving antioxidant activity, and enhancing nitrogen metabolism. |
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| Calcium silicate. | The application of Si helps wheat plants to absorb high amounts of K+ and hinder the uptake of Na+ or its translocation. |
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| Sodium silicate | Silicon effectively reduces sodium ion transportation within the plant. It is also found that the reduction in silicon occurs not |
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| Silicic acid | Silicon can act by increasing the capture of CO2 and maintaining the photosynthetic rate by increasing the stomatal density of the leaf. Silicon promotes the increase of this variable, indicating that it contributes to the reestablishment of stomata, reaching a number similar to the control. |
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| Potassium silicate | Silicon application improves the tolerance of |
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| Sodium silicate | The addition of Si improves stress tolerance |
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| Potassium silicate | Exogenous Si application improves plant growth parameters by improving net photosynthesis by specifically hindering Na+ and Cl- uptake and translocation to sensitive plant tissues, hence enhancing tolerance to salinity. |
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| Potassium silicate | The presence of Si reduces the uptake of Na+ ions from the roots to shoots. Thus, Si-enhanced salt tolerance is associated with the selective uptake and transport of potassium and sodium by plants. |
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| Silicic acid | The addition of Si to the shoot induction medium significantly increases shoot induction. Thus, Si appears to promote shoot regeneration by altering the activity of antioxidant enzymes. |
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| Sodium silicate | Exogenous Si improves tolerance by decreasing the sodium ion concentration in leaves. |
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| Sodium silicate | Si salt enhances stress tolerance by reducing Na+ translocation and decreasing transpiration under salinity. |
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| Calcium silicate | The results conclude that Si selectively interacts with Na+, and thus reduces Na+ uptake and translocation from the roots to shoots. |
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Figure 4Schematic representation of silicon crosstalk with plants tolerance mechanisms during salinity stress.
Figure 5Accumulation of Si in different parts of plants. Silicon accumulates in the form of phytoliths or discrete silica bodies in different parts of a plant, e.g. the roots, leaves, and stems. This deposition takes place beneath the cell wall of the roots, where the discrete bodies of Si bind with the Na+, resulting in the increased uptake of K+ and the reduced transport of Na+ to the upper regions of the plants.