Antioxidant Defense and Ionic Homeostasis Govern Stage-Specific Response of Salinity Stress in Contrasting Rice Varieties

被引:3
|
作者
Kumar, Vikash [1 ,2 ]
Srivastava, Ashish K. [1 ]
Sharma, Deepak [3 ]
Pandey, Shailaja P. [4 ]
Pandey, Manish [1 ]
Dudwadkar, Ayushi [4 ]
Parab, Harshala J. [4 ]
Suprasanna, Penna [1 ]
Das, Bikram K. [1 ]
机构
[1] Bhabha Atom Res Ctr, Nucl Agr & Biotechnol Div, Mumbai 400085, India
[2] Homi Bhabha Natl Inst, BARC Campus, Mumbai 400094, India
[3] Indira Gandhi Krishi Vishwa Vidyalaya, Dept Genet & Plant Breeding, Raipur 492012, India
[4] Bhabha Atom Res Ctr, Analyt Chem Div, Mumbai 400085, India
来源
PLANTS-BASEL | 2024年 / 13卷 / 06期
关键词
rice; salt stress; stage-specific salinity; antioxidant defense; ionic homeostasis; salt tolerance; TOLERANCE; REDOX; CHLORIDE; PROLINE; WHEAT;
D O I
10.3390/plants13060778
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
Salt stress is one of the most severe environmental stresses limiting the productivity of crops, including rice. However, there is a lack of information on how salt-stress sensitivity varies across different developmental stages in rice. In view of this, a comparative evaluation of contrasting rice varieties CSR36 (salt tolerant) and Jaya (salt sensitive) was conducted, wherein NaCl stress (50 mM) was independently given either at seedling (S-stage), tillering (T-stage), flowering (F-stage), seed-setting (SS-stage) or throughout plant growth, from seedling till maturity. Except for S-stage, CSR36 exhibited improved NaCl stress tolerance than Jaya, at all other tested stages. Principal component analysis (PCA) revealed that the improved NaCl stress tolerance in CSR36 coincided with enhanced activities/levels of enzymatic/non-enzymatic antioxidants (root ascorbate peroxidase for T- (2.74-fold) and S+T- (2.12-fold) stages and root catalase for F- (5.22-fold), S+T- (2.10-fold) and S+T+F- (2.61-fold) stages) and higher accumulation of osmolytes (shoot proline for F-stage (5.82-fold) and S+T+F- (2.31-fold) stage), indicating better antioxidant capacitance and osmotic adjustment, respectively. In contrast, higher shoot accumulation of Na+ (14.25-fold) and consequent increase in Na+/K+ (14.56-fold), Na+/Mg+2 (13.09-fold) and Na+/Ca+2 (8.38-fold) ratio in shoot, were identified as major variables associated with S-stage salinity in Jaya. Higher root Na+ and their associated ratio were major deriving force for other stage specific and combined stage salinity in Jaya. In addition, CSR36 exhibited higher levels of Fe3+, Mn2+ and Co3+ and lower Cl- and SO42-, suggesting its potential to discriminate essential and non-essential nutrients, which might contribute to NaCl stress tolerance. Taken together, the findings provided the framework for stage-specific salinity responses in rice, which will facilitate crop-improvement programs for specific ecological niches, including coastal regions.
引用
收藏
页数:22
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Root-Specific Transcript Profiling of Contrasting Rice Genotypes in Response to Salinity Stress
    Cotsaftis, Olivier
    Plett, Darren
    Johnson, Alexander A. T.
    Walia, Harkamal
    Wilson, Clyde
    Ismail, Abdelbagi M.
    Close, Timothy J.
    Tester, Mark
    Baumann, Ute
    MOLECULAR PLANT, 2011, 4 (01) : 25 - 41
  • [2] Identification of Sri Lankan rice varieties having osmotic and ionic stress tolerance during the first phase of salinity stress
    De Costa, W. A. J. M.
    Wijeratne, M. A. D.
    De Costa, D. M.
    JOURNAL OF THE NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION OF SRI LANKA, 2012, 40 (03): : 251 - 280
  • [3] Morpho-Physiological and Stress-Related Gene Expression of Rice Varieties in Response to Salinity Stress at Early Vegetative Stage
    Shakri, Tasneem
    Che-Othman, Muhammad Hafiz
    Isa, Nurulhikma Md
    Sukiran, Noor Liyana
    Zainal, Zamri
    AGRICULTURE-BASEL, 2022, 12 (05):
  • [4] Hydrogen peroxide priming alleviates salinity induced toxic effect in maize by improving antioxidant defense system, ionic homeostasis, photosynthetic efficiency and hormonal crosstalk
    Chattha, Muhammad Umer
    Ul Hassan, Muhammad Uzair
    Khan, Imran
    Nawaz, Muhammad
    Shah, Adnan Noor
    Sattar, Abdul
    Hashem, Mohamed
    Alamri, Saad
    Aslam, Muhammad Talha
    Alhaithloul, Haifa A. S.
    Hassan, Muhammad Umair
    Qari, Sameer H.
    MOLECULAR BIOLOGY REPORTS, 2022, 49 (06) : 5611 - 5624
  • [5] NITRIC OXIDE REGULATED IMPROVEMENT IN GROWTH AND YIELD OF RICE PLANTS GROWN UNDER SALINITY STRESS: ANTIOXIDANT DEFENSE SYSTEM
    Habib, N.
    Akram, M. S.
    Javed, M. T.
    Azeem, M.
    Ali, Q.
    Shaheen, H. L.
    Ashraf, M.
    APPLIED ECOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH, 2016, 14 (05): : 91 - 105
  • [6] Stage-specific changes in hydrogen peroxide, membrane damage and antioxidant defense of a xerohalophyte fodder grass Panicum antidotale under increasing salinity
    Rasheed, Aysha
    Ali, Haibat
    Gul, Bilquees
    Hameed, Abdul
    SOUTH AFRICAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY, 2022, 151 : 1025 - 1034
  • [7] Harnessing the role of rhizo-bacteria to mitigate salinity stress in rice (Orzya sativa); focus on antioxidant defense system, photosynthesis response, and rhizosphere microbial diversity
    Chen, Zejian
    Zhang, Peng
    Wang, Bin
    Li, Hui
    Li, Shuxin
    Zhang, Hua
    Haider, Fasih Ullah
    Li, Xiangnan
    RHIZOSPHERE, 2025, 33
  • [8] Glycine-betaine induced salinity tolerance in maize by regulating the physiological attributes, antioxidant defense system and ionic homeostasis
    Dustgeer, Zain
    Seleiman, Mahmoud F.
    Khan, Imran
    Chattha, Muhammad U.
    Ali, Esmat F.
    Alhammad, Bushra A.
    Jalal, Rewaa S.
    Refay, Yahya
    Hassan, Muhammad U.
    NOTULAE BOTANICAE HORTI AGROBOTANICI CLUJ-NAPOCA, 2021, 49 (01) : 1 - 17
  • [9] Whole genome sequence analysis of rice genotypes with contrasting response to salinity stress
    Subudhi, Prasanta K.
    Shankar, Rama
    Jain, Mukesh
    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2020, 10 (01)
  • [10] MORPHO-PHYSIOLOGICAL RESPONSE OF RICE (ORYZA SATIVA L.) VARIETIES TO SALINITY STRESS
    Ul Haq, Tanveer
    Akhtar, Javaid
    Nawaz, Shafqat
    Ahmad, Rashid
    PAKISTAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY, 2009, 41 (06) : 2943 - 2956