Effects of Inoculation with Stress-Tolerant Rhizobia on the Response of Alfalfa ( Medicago sativa L.) to Combined Salinity and Cadmium Stress.
M Cecilia Pacheco-InsaustiIvana Tamara PonceMiguel A QuiñonesHilda E PedranzaniJosé J PueyoPublished in: Plants (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
Agricultural soil salinization, which is often combined with heavy-metal contamination, is an ever-growing problem in the current era of global change. Legumes have a high potential for nitrogen fixation and are ideal crops for the reclamation of degraded soils. Alfalfa ( Medicago sativa ) is a valuable forage crop cultivated worldwide. Alfalfa plants fertilized with nitrogen or inoculated with a salt- and cadmium-tolerant Sinorhizobium meliloti strain were subjected to combined NaCl and CdCl 2 stresses. Our results showed that inoculated plants presented higher aerial biomass than nitrogen-fertilized plants when they were exposed to salinity and cadmium together. To assess the mechanisms involved in the plant response to the combined stresses, superoxide dismutase and catalase antioxidant enzymatic activities were determined. Both increased upon stress; however, the increase in catalase activity was significantly less marked for inoculated plants, suggesting that other tolerance mechanisms might be active. Cd accumulation was lower in inoculated plants than in fertilized plants, which appears to imply that inoculation somehow prevented cadmium uptake by the plant roots. Expression analyses of several involved genes suggested that inoculation stimulated the biosynthesis of proline, phytochelatins, and homophytochelatins, together indicating that inoculated plants might be better suited to withstand combined salinity and cadmium stress effects.