Nejvíce citovaný článek - PubMed ID 26433462
Metabolites and hormones are involved in the intraspecific variability of drought hardening in radiata pine
Under the global warming scenario, obtaining plant material with improved tolerance to abiotic stresses is a challenge for afforestation programs. In this work, maritime pine (Pinus pinaster Aiton) plants were produced from somatic embryos matured at different temperatures (18, 23, or 28 °C, named after M18, M23, and M28, respectively) and after 2 years in the greenhouse a heat stress treatment (45 °C for 3 h/day for 10 days) was applied. Temperature variation during embryo development resulted in altered phenotypes (leaf histology, proline content, photosynthetic rates, and hormone profile) before and after stress. The thickness of chlorenchyma was initially larger in M28 plants, but was significantly reduced after heat stress, while increased in M18 plants. Irrespective of their origin, when these plants were subjected to a heat treatment, relative water content (RWC) and photosynthetic carbon assimilation rates were not significantly affected, although M18 plants increased net photosynthesis rate after 10 days recovery (tR). M18 plants showed proline contents that increased dramatically (2.4-fold) when subjected to heat stress, while proline contents remained unaffected in M23 and M28 plants. Heat stress significantly increased abscisic acid (ABA) content in the needles of maritime pine plants (1.4-, 3.6- and 1.9-fold in M18, M23, and M28 plants, respectively), while indole-3-acetic acid content only increased in needles from M23 plants. After the heat treatment, the total cytokinin contents of needles decreased significantly, particularly in M18 and M28 plants, although levels of active forms (cytokinin bases) did not change in M18 plants. In conclusion, our results suggest that maturation of maritime pine somatic embryos at lower temperature resulted in plants with better performance when subjected to subsequent high temperature stress, as demonstrated by faster and higher proline increase, lower increases in ABA levels, no reduction in active cytokinin, and a better net photosynthesis rate recovery.
- Klíčová slova
- abiotic stress, leaf anatomy, maritime pine, photosynthesis, resilience, somatic embryogenesis,
- MeSH
- borovice genetika růst a vývoj MeSH
- fotosyntéza fyziologie MeSH
- listy rostlin metabolismus MeSH
- období sucha MeSH
- reakce na tepelný šok genetika fyziologie MeSH
- somatická embryogeneze rostlin metody MeSH
- teplota MeSH
- vysoká teplota škodlivé účinky MeSH
- zemědělství metody MeSH
- Publikační typ
- časopisecké články MeSH
Drought and salinity reduce seed germination, seedling emergence, and early seedling establishment, affect plant metabolism, and hence, reduce crop yield. Development of technologies that can increase plant tolerance of these challenging growth conditions is a major current interest among plant scientists and breeders. Seed priming has become established as one of the practical approaches that can alleviate the negative impact of many environmental stresses and improve the germination and overall performance of crops. Hormopriming using different plant growth regulators has been widely demonstrated as effective, but information about using cytokinins (CKs) as priming agents is limited to only a few studies using kinetin or 6-benzylaminopurine (BAP). Moreover, the mode of action of these compounds in improving seed and plant fitness through priming has not yet been studied. For many years, BAP has been one of the CKs most commonly applied exogenously to plants to delay senescence and reduce the impact of stress. However, rapid endogenous N 9-glucosylation of BAP can result in negative effects. This can be suppressed by hydroxylation of the benzyl ring or by appropriate N 9 purine substitution. Replacement of the 2' or 3' hydroxyl groups of a nucleoside with a fluorine atom has shown promising results in drug research and biochemistry as a means of enhancing biological activity and increasing chemical or metabolic stability. Here, we show that the application of this chemical modification in four new N 9-substituted CK derivatives with a fluorinated carbohydrate moiety improved the antisenescence properties of CKs. Besides, detailed phenotypical analysis of the growth and development of Arabidopsis plants primed with the new CK analogs over a broad concentration range and under various environmental conditions revealed that they improve growth regulation and antistress activity. Seed priming with, for example, 6-(3-hydroxybenzylamino)-2'-deoxy-2'-fluoro-9-(β)-D-arabinofuranosylpurine promoted plant growth under control conditions and alleviated the negative effects of the salt and osmotic stress. The mode of action of this hormopriming and its effect on plant metabolism were further analyzed through quantification of the endogenous levels of phytohormones such as CKs, auxins and abscisic acid, and the results are discussed.
- Klíčová slova
- Arabidopsis, abiotic stress, antisenescence, cytokinin analogs, hormopriming, plant biostimulant characterization index,
- Publikační typ
- časopisecké články MeSH
Plant phenotyping platforms offer automated, fast scoring of traits that simplify the selection of varieties that are more competitive under stress conditions. However, indoor phenotyping methods are frequently based on the analysis of plant growth in individual pots. We present a reproducible indoor phenotyping method for screening young barley populations under water stress conditions and after subsequent rewatering. The method is based on a simple read-out of data using RGB imaging, projected canopy height, as a useful feature for indirectly following the kinetics of growth and water loss in a population of barley. A total of 47 variables including 15 traits and 32 biochemical metabolites measured (morphometric parameters, chlorophyll fluorescence imaging, quantification of stress-related metabolites; amino acids and polyamines, and enzymatic activities) were used to validate the method. The study allowed the identification of metabolites related to water stress response and recovery. Specifically, we found that cadaverine (Cad), 1,3-aminopropane (DAP), tryptamine (Tryp), and tyramine (Tyra) were the major contributors to the water stress response, whereas Cad, DAP, and Tyra, but not Tryp, remained at higher levels in the stressed plants even after rewatering. In this work, we designed, optimized and validated a non-invasive image-based method for automated screening of potential water stress tolerance genotypes in barley populations. We demonstrated the applicability of the method using transgenic barley lines with different sensitivity to drought stress showing that combining canopy height and the metabolite profile we can discriminate tolerant from sensitive genotypes. We showed that the projected canopy height a sensitive trait that truly reflects other invasively studied morphological, physiological, and metabolic traits and that our presented methodological setup can be easily applicable for large-scale screenings in low-cost systems equipped with a simple RGB camera. We believe that our approach will contribute to accelerate the study and understanding of the plant water stress response and recovery capacity in crops, such as barley.
- Klíčová slova
- Hordeum vulgare, amino acids, antioxidative enzymes, blue (RGB) imaging, canopy height, fluorescence, green, indoor phenotyping, polyamines, red,
- Publikační typ
- časopisecké články MeSH
Environmental stresses have a significant effect on agricultural crop productivity worldwide. Exposure of seeds to abiotic stresses, such as salinity among others, results in lower seed viability, reduced germination, and poor seedling establishment. Alternative agronomic practices, e.g., the use of plant biostimulants, have attracted considerable interest from the scientific community and commercial enterprises. Biostimulants, i.e., products of biological origin (including bacteria, fungi, seaweeds, higher plants, or animals) have significant potential for (i) improving physiological processes in plants and (ii) stimulating germination, growth and stress tolerance. However, biostimulants are diverse, and can range from single compounds to complex matrices with different groups of bioactive components that have only been partly characterized. Due to the complex mixtures of biologically active compounds present in biostimulants, efficient methods for characterizing their potential mode of action are needed. In this study, we report the development of a novel complex approach to biological activity testing, based on multi-trait high-throughput screening (MTHTS) of Arabidopsis characteristics. These include the in vitro germination rate, early seedling establishment capacity, growth capacity under stress and stress response. The method is suitable for identifying new biostimulants and characterizing their mode of action. Representatives of compatible solutes such as amino acids and polyamines known to be present in many of the biostimulant irrespective of their origin, i.e., well-established biostimulants that enhance stress tolerance and crop productivity, were used for the assay optimization and validation. The selected compounds were applied through seed priming over a broad concentration range and the effect was investigated simultaneously under control, moderate stress and severe salt stress conditions. The new MTHTS approach represents a powerful tool in the field of biostimulant research and development and offers direct classification of the biostimulants mode of action into three categories: (1) plant growth promotors/inhibitors, (2) stress alleviators, and (3) combined action.
- Klíčová slova
- biostimulants, multi-trait high-throughput screening assay, plant biostimulant characterization index, polyamines, proline, salinity,
- Publikační typ
- časopisecké články MeSH
Plant roots are the first parts of plants to face drought stress (DS), and thus root modification is important for plants to adapt to drought. We hypothesized that the roots of arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) plants exhibit better adaptation in terms of morphology and phytohormones under DS. Trifoliate orange seedlings inoculated with Diversispora versiformis were subjected to well-watered (WW) and DS conditions for 6 weeks. AM seedlings exhibited better growth performance and significantly greater number of 1st, 2nd, and 3rd order lateral roots, root length, area, average diameter, volume, tips, forks, and crossings than non-AM seedlings under both WW and DS conditions. AM fungal inoculation considerably increased root hair density under both WW and DS and root hair length under DS, while dramatically decreased root hair length under WW but there was no change in root hair diameter. AM plants had greater concentrations of indole-3-acetic acid, methyl jasmonate, nitric oxide, and calmodulin in roots, which were significantly correlated with changes in root morphology. These results support the hypothesis that AM plants show superior adaptation in root morphology under DS that is potentially associated with indole-3-acetic acid, methyl jasmonate, nitric oxide, and calmodulin levels.
- MeSH
- acetáty metabolismus MeSH
- cyklopentany metabolismus MeSH
- fyziologická adaptace MeSH
- Glomeromycota metabolismus fyziologie MeSH
- kalmodulin metabolismus MeSH
- kořeny rostlin růst a vývoj mikrobiologie MeSH
- kyseliny indoloctové metabolismus MeSH
- mykorhiza růst a vývoj MeSH
- období sucha MeSH
- oxid dusnatý metabolismus MeSH
- oxylipiny metabolismus MeSH
- Poncirus růst a vývoj mikrobiologie MeSH
- regulátory růstu rostlin metabolismus MeSH
- Publikační typ
- časopisecké články MeSH
- práce podpořená grantem MeSH
- Názvy látek
- acetáty MeSH
- cyklopentany MeSH
- indoleacetic acid MeSH Prohlížeč
- kalmodulin MeSH
- kyseliny indoloctové MeSH
- methyl jasmonate MeSH Prohlížeč
- oxid dusnatý MeSH
- oxylipiny MeSH
- regulátory růstu rostlin MeSH