Abstract

Imbibitional heat and chilling stress caused disruption of redox-homeostasis and oxidative damage to newly assembled membrane system by aggravating membrane lipid peroxidation and protein oxidation [measured in terms of thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (TBARS), free carbonyl content (C=O groups) and membrane protein thiol level (MPTL)] along with concomitant increase in accumulation of reactive oxygen species (superoxide and hydrogen peroxide) and significant reduction of antioxidative defense (assessed in terms of total thiol content and activities of superoxide dismutase, catalase, ascorbate peroxidase and glutathione reductase) in both the salt sensitive (Ratna) and resistant (SR 26B) germinating tissues of rice cultivars. When compared, salt resistant cultivar SR 26B found to suffer significantly less oxidative membrane damage as compared to salt sensitive cultivar Ratna. Treatment with low titer of hydrogen peroxide caused significant reversal in oxidative damages to the newly assembled membrane system imposed by imbibitional heat and chilling stress (evident from the data of TBARS, C=O, MPTL, ROS accumulation, membrane permeability status, membrane injury index and oxidative stress index) in seedlings of both the cultivars of rice (Ratna and SR 26B). Imbibitional H2O2 pretreatment also caused up-regulation of antioxidative defense (activities of superoxide dismutase, catalase, ascorbate peroxidase, glutathione reductase and total thiol content) in the heat and chilling stress-raised seedlings of experimental rice cultivars. When the parameters of early growth performances were assessed (in terms of relative growth index, biomass accumulation and vigor index), it clearly exhibited significant improvement of early growth performances of both the rice cultivars. Better response towards H2O2-mediated acclamatory performances and restoration of redox- homeostasis under extremes of temperature were noticed in salt sensitive rice cultivar Ratna compared to salt resistant SR 26B. Taken as a whole, the result suggests the significance of the role of ‘inductive pulse’ of H2O2 in acclimatizing adverse temperature stress by restoration of redox-homeostasis and mitigation of oxidative membrane protein and lipid damages during the recovery phase of post-germination event.

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