Literature DB >> 33260911

Responses to Salt Stress in Portulaca: Insight into Its Tolerance Mechanisms.

Orsolya Borsai1,2, Mohamad Al Hassan3, Cornel Negrușier4, M Dolores Raigón5, Monica Boscaiu6, Radu E Sestraș7, Oscar Vicente5.   

Abstract

Climate change and its detrimental effects on agricultural production, freshwater availability and biodiversity accentuated the need for more stress-tolerant varieties of crops. This requires unraveling the underlying pathways that convey tolerance to abiotic stress in wild relatives of food crops, industrial crops and ornamentals, whose tolerance was not eroded by crop cycles. In this work we try to demonstrate the feasibility of such strategy applying and investigating the effects of saline stress in different species and cultivars of Portulaca. We attempted to unravel the main mechanisms of stress tolerance in this genus and to identify genotypes with higher tolerance, a procedure that could be used as an early detection method for other ornamental and minor crops. To investigate these mechanisms, six-week-old seedlings were subjected to saline stress for 5 weeks with increasing salt concentrations (up to 400 mM NaCl). Several growth parameters and biochemical stress markers were determined in treated and control plants, such as photosynthetic pigments, monovalent ions (Na+, K+ and Cl-), different osmolytes (proline and soluble sugars), oxidative stress markers (malondialdehyde-a by-product of membrane lipid peroxidation-MDA) and non-enzymatic antioxidants (total phenolic compounds and total flavonoids). The applied salt stress inhibited plant growth, degraded photosynthetic pigments, increased concentrations of specific osmolytes in both leaves and roots, but did not induce significant oxidative stress, as demonstrated by only small fluctuations in MDA levels. All Portulaca genotypes analyzed were found to be Na+ and Cl- includers, accumulating high amounts of these ions under saline stress conditions, but P. grandiflora proved to be more salt tolerant, showing only a small reduction under growth stress, an increased flower production and the lowest reduction in K+/Na+ rate in its leaves.

Entities:  

Keywords:  abiotic stress; antioxidant activity; growth inhibition; ion homeostasis; proline; salt stress

Year:  2020        PMID: 33260911     DOI: 10.3390/plants9121660

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Plants (Basel)        ISSN: 2223-7747


  4 in total

Review 1.  Mechanisms of Salt Tolerance and Molecular Breeding of Salt-Tolerant Ornamental Plants.

Authors:  Jianrong Guo; Changdan Shan; Yifan Zhang; Xinlei Wang; Huaying Tian; Guoliang Han; Yi Zhang; Baoshan Wang
Journal:  Front Plant Sci       Date:  2022-04-27       Impact factor: 6.627

2.  Salinity Stress Affects Photosynthesis, Malondialdehyde Formation, and Proline Content in Portulaca oleracea L.

Authors:  Helena Hnilickova; Kamil Kraus; Pavla Vachova; Frantisek Hnilicka
Journal:  Plants (Basel)       Date:  2021-04-22

3.  Molecular mechanisms of flavonoid accumulation in germinating common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris) under salt stress.

Authors:  Qi Zhang; Guangyue Zheng; Qi Wang; Jixing Zhu; Zhiheng Zhou; Wenshuo Zhou; Junjie Xu; Haoyue Sun; Jingwen Zhong; Yanhua Gu; Zhengong Yin; Yan-Li Du; Ji-Dao Du
Journal:  Front Nutr       Date:  2022-08-29

4.  The Effects of Salt Stress on Germination, Seedling Growth and Biochemical Responses of Tunisian Squash (Cucurbita maxima Duchesne) Germplasm.

Authors:  Neji Tarchoun; Wassim Saadaoui; Najla Mezghani; Ourania I Pavli; Hanen Falleh; Spyridon A Petropoulos
Journal:  Plants (Basel)       Date:  2022-03-17
  4 in total

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