| Literature DB >> 33212772 |
Mohamed Moustafa-Farag1,2, Amr Elkelish3, Mohamed Dafea2, Mumtaz Khan4, Marino B Arnao5, Magdi T Abdelhamid6, Aziz Abu El-Ezz7, Abdlwareth Almoneafy8, Ahmed Mahmoud2,9, Mahrous Awad10, Linfeng Li1, Yanhong Wang1, Mirza Hasanuzzaman11, Shaoying Ai1.
Abstract
Melatonin (MT) is a pleiotropic molecule with diverse and numerous actions both in plants and animals. In plants, MT acts as an excellent promotor of tolerance against abiotic stress situations such as drought, cold, heat, salinity, and chemical pollutants. In all these situations, MT has a stimulating effect on plants, fomenting many changes in biochemical processes and stress-related gene expression. Melatonin plays vital roles as an antioxidant and can work as a free radical scavenger to protect plants from oxidative stress by stabilization cell redox status; however, MT can alleviate the toxic oxygen and nitrogen species. Beyond this, MT stimulates the antioxidant enzymes and augments antioxidants, as well as activates the ascorbate-glutathione (AsA-GSH) cycle to scavenge excess reactive oxygen species (ROS). In this review, we examine the recent data on the capacity of MT to alleviate the effects of common abiotic soil stressors, such as salinity, alkalinity, acidity, and the presence of heavy metals, reinforcing the general metabolism of plants and counteracting harmful agents. An exhaustive analysis of the latest advances in this regard is presented, and possible future applications of MT are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: acidity; alkalinity; antioxidants; heavy metals; melatonin; salinity
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33212772 PMCID: PMC7696660 DOI: 10.3390/molecules25225359
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Primitive impact of exogenous melatonin application on different salt-stressed plants.
| Common Name | Scientific Name | Stress Treatment | MT Concentration | Findings | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||
| Rice |
| 0.5% NaCl | 0, 10, 20 μM | Antioxidants ↑, leaf senescence and cell death ↓, chlorophyll degradation ↓ | [ |
| Rice |
| 150 and 200 mM NaCl | 10–500 μM | Seed germination and root vigor ↑, antioxidant enzymes ↑, Na+ and Cl− contents ↓ | [ |
| Maize |
| 100 mM NaCl | 1 μM | Antioxidant enzymes ↑, K+ contents and K+/Na+ ratios ↑, electrolyte leakage ↓, MDA ↓ | [ |
| Maize |
| 150 mM NaCl | 0–100 μM | Photosynthesis ↑, antioxidant enzymes ↑, Na+ contents ↓ | [ |
| Broad bean |
| 3.85 and 7.69 dSm−1 diluted seawater | 0100 and 500 μM | Plant growth ↑, RWC ↑, photosynthesis ↑, carbohydrates ↑, phenolic content ↑, IAA ↑, K+,Ca+2, K+/Na+, and Ca+2/Na+ ratios ↑ | [ |
| Soybean |
| Soil saturated with 1% ( | 0–100 μM | Photosynthesis ↑, cell division ↑, carbohydrates ↑, fatty acid ↑, ascorbate ↑, the inhibitory effects on gene expressions ↓ | [ |
| Rapeseed |
| 0.75% NaCl | 0–100 μM | Antioxidant enzymes ↑, solute accumulation ↑ | [ |
|
| |||||
| Pingyitiancha |
| 100 mM NaCl | 0.1 μM | Photosynthesis ↑, ion homeostasis ↑, oxidative damage ↓ | [ |
|
| |||||
| Tomato |
| 75 mM NaCl | 100 μM | Proteins and membranes protection ↑, antioxidants ↑, photosynthesis ↑ | [ |
| Tomato |
| 150 mM NaCl | 0–200 μM | Photosynthesis ↑, ROS ↓ | [ |
| Cucumber |
| 150 mM NaCl | 1 μM | Energy production regulation ↑ | [ |
| Cucumber |
| 200 mM NaCl | 0–200 μM | Antioxidant enzymes ↑, chlorophyll ↑, photosynthesis ↑ | [ |
| Cucumber |
| 150 mM NaCl | (0–500 μM) | GA3 biosynthesis ↑, germination rate ↑, ABA ↓, oxidative damage ↓ | [ |
| Watermelon |
| 300 mM NaCl | 50–150 μM | Photosynthesis ↑, antioxidant enzymes ↑, photosystem II efficiency ↑, stomatal closure ↓, oxidative damage ↓ | [ |
Abbreviations: MT, melatonin; NaCl, sodium chloride; K+, potassium; MDA, malondialdehyde; RWC, relative water content; IAA, indole acetic acid; Ca2+, calcium; ROS, reactive oxygen species, GA3, gibberellic acid; ABA, abscisic acid.
Figure 1A schematic summary of the physiological responses of melatonin employed in salinity stress tolerance (based on available research findings). The impact of salinity in several physiological reactions such as reactive oxygen species (ROS), abscisic acid (ABA), sodium and chloride ions, and stomatal closure. Additionally, melatonin promotes plant tolerance to salinity stress by enhancing several pathways such as membrane integrity, chlorophyll, photosynthesis, plant growth, and potassium and calcium ions.
The action of melatonin in mitigation of pH stress responses.
| Common Name | Scientific Name | Stress Type | MT Concentration * | Findings | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lupin |
| pH (3.5 to 8.5) | ? ** | ↑Melatonin | [ |
| Apple |
| Alkalinity (pH 8.5 and 8.8) | 5 μM | ↑Polyamines, MDA ↓, ROS ↓, antioxidants ↑, | [ |
| Tomato |
| Acidity (pH 2.5) | 100 μM | Photosynthesis ↑, antioxidants↑, ROS ↓ | [ |
* Only the best doses of exogenous melatonin have been selected, which positively impacted plant tolerance against pH stress. ** No MT treatment. This report studied the possible changes in MT levels in response to different stressors, including pH.
Figure 2Model of melatonin action under acidity and/or alkalinity stress. Melatonin triggers the accumulation of auxin, polyamines, and nitric oxide. Furthermore, managing ion homeostasis by decreasing Na+ content and increasing K+ content. Melatonin reduced oxidative stress by triggering the antioxidant machinery and decreasing chlorophyll degradation. Exogenous melatonin induces NO generation, which subsequently upregulates the expression level of defense genes.
Role of melatonin in heavy metal stress tolerance.
| Common Name | Scientific Name | Stress Concentration | MT Concentration * | Findings | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||
| Wheat |
| 0.2 mM | 50 μM | Antioxidants enzymes ↑ | [ |
| Alfalfa |
| 50, 100, and 200 μM | 50 μM | ABC transporter and PCR2 transcripts ↑, Cd accumulation ↓ | [ |
| Tree tomato |
| 10 mg·L−1 | 50 μM | Antioxidants ↑, plant biomass ↑ | [ |
| Tomato |
| 25 and 100 μM | 100 μM | Antioxidants ↑, glutathione and phytochelatins↑ | [ |
| Tomato |
| 100 μM | 1 μM | Plant growth ↑, electrolyte leakage ↓, photoinhibition ↓ | [ |
|
| |||||
| Tobacco |
| 15 μM | 200 nM | DNA damage ↓, cell growth, and viability ↑ | [ |
| Tobacco |
| 15 μM | 200 nM | Cell proliferation ↑, cell death ↓ | [ |
|
| |||||
| Soybean |
| 300 μM | 100 mM | Antioxidants ↑, photosynthesis ↑, MDA ↓ | [ |
|
| |||||
| Red cabbage |
| 0.5 and 1 mM | 10 μM | Germination and fresh weight ↑, MDA ↓ | [ |
|
| |||||
| Watermelon |
| 50 mg·L−1 | 0.1 μM | Plant growth ↑, chlorophyll ↑, photosynthesis ↑, antioxidant enzymes ↑, V accumulation ↓, ROS ↓, MDA ↓ | [ |
* Only those maximum doses of exogenous melatonin have been selected, which had positive impacts on plant tolerance against heavy metal stresses. Abbreviations: Cd, cadmium; MDA, malondialdehyde; ROS, reactive oxygen species.
Figure 3Melatonin induced mechanisms aimed at increasing plant tolerance to heavy metals. The positive effect of MT is species and dose-dependent responses. The exogenous MT induces the endogenous MT via upregulating the biosynthesis genes, which controls the ROS scavenging, molecular elements, biosynthesis, and heavy metal translocation. Moreover, MT regulates the molecular elements such as NS genes (nuclear shuttle protein-interacting), Bl-1 (Bax inhibitor-1 protects against apoptosis), SIGSH1 and SIPCS (responsible for GSH and PCS in tomato), ABC transporter and PCR2 (stress-responsive genes), as well as Rubisco and ATPase (crucial genes to the photosynthesis). Besides, melatonin enhances the biosynthesis of metabolic enzymes, phytohormones (i.e., auxins (AUXs), and brassinosteroids (BRs)), organic acids (root exudates such as malate and citrate), and phytochelatins (chelate the heavy metals (HMs) in roots). Consequently, the whole plant life cycle is improved, starting with seed germination till yield and quality, collectively conferring heavy metal tolerance.
Melatonin-upregulated genes under heavy metal stress.
| Common Name | Scientific Name | HM Concentration | Melatonin Treatment * | Gene Name | Gene Description | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wheat |
| 0.2 mM Cd | 100 μM | [ | ||
| Watermelon |
| 50 mg·L−1 V | 0.1 μM | Cla010664 and Cla004567 | O-methyl transferase and methione | [ |
| Tomato |
| 100 μM Cd | 100 μM | Responsible for GSH and PCS in tomato | [ | |
| Alfalafa |
| 100 μM Cd | 50 μM |
| [ | |
| Tomato |
| 100 μM Cd | NA | Heat shock factor A1a and caffeic acid O-methyltransferase 1 | [ | |
| Zoysiagrass |
| 400 μM Al | NA |
| An O-methyltransferase gene cloned from | [ |
| Soybean |
| 50 μM Al | 1 μM | Genes encoding acetyltransferase NSI-like (nuclear shuttle protein-interacting) | [ | |
| Tomato |
| 100 μM Cd | 1 μM |
| Melatonin biosynthetic genes | [ |
| Tobaco |
| 15 μM Pb | 200 nM |
| Bax inhibitor-1 protects against apoptosis | [ |
* Only those maximum doses of exogenous melatonin have been selected, which had positive impacts on plant tolerance against heavy metal stresses. Cd (cadmium), Al (aluminum), V (vanadium).