Silicon regulates phosphate deficiency through involvement of auxin and nitric oxide in barley roots.
Nidhi KandholPadmaja RaiVipul MishraSangeeta PandeySantosh KumarRupesh DeshmukhShivesh SharmaVijay Pratap SinghDurgesh Kumar TripathiPublished in: Planta (2024)
, and MDA), antioxidant system (enzymatic--APX, CAT, SOD, GR, DHAR, MDHAR as well as non-enzymatic--AsA and GSH), NO content, and proline metabolism were the key traits that were assessed under different treatments. The P deficiency distinctly declined growth of barley seedlings, which was due to enhancement in oxidative stress leading to inhibition of photosynthesis. These results were also in parallel with an enhancement in antioxidant activity, particularly SOD and CAT, and endogenous proline level and its biosynthetic enzyme (P5CS). The addition of Si exhibited beneficial effects on barley plants grown in Pi-deficient medium as reflected in increased growth, photosynthetic activity, and redox balance through the regulation of antioxidant machinery particularly ascorbate-glutathione cycle. We noticed that auxin and NO were also found to be independently participating in Si-mediated improvement of growth and other parameters in barley roots under Pi deficiency. Data of gene expression analysis for PHOSPHATE TRANSPORTER1 (HvPHT1) indicate that Si helps in increasing Pi uptake as per the need of Pi-deficient barley seedlings, and also auxin and NO both appear to help Si in accomplishing this task probably by inducing lateral root formation. These results are suggestive of possible application of Si as a fertilizer to correct the negative effects of nutritional stresses in plants. Further research at genetic level to understand Si-induced mechanisms for mitigating Pi deficiency can be helpful in the development of new varieties with improved tolerance against Pi deficiency, especially for cultivation in areas with Pi-deficient soils.
Keyphrases
- oxidative stress
- room temperature
- nitric oxide
- arabidopsis thaliana
- genome wide
- hydrogen peroxide
- replacement therapy
- diabetic rats
- heavy metals
- high glucose
- dna damage
- anti inflammatory
- copy number
- induced apoptosis
- big data
- cell death
- artificial intelligence
- breast cancer cells
- genome wide identification
- smoking cessation
- heat stress