Abstract

Various environmental contaminants can find their way to enter plant cells and disturb and/or damage the essential components of PSII repair cycle in chloroplast, thereby resulting in dysfunction of chloroplast. In the current research, a microcosm hydroponic experiment was set up to evaluate the comparative effects of sodium hydrosulfide (NaHS)- and proline (Pro)-mediated functional repairing of chloroplast in rice plants under SCN− stress. Our results displayed that when exposed to environmental realistic SCN− concentrations (24–300 mg L−1), foist significant (p < 0.05) gene-dose repercussion on the pathways of photosynthetic reactions and energy metabolism in rice shoots, and a downturn in the level of total soluble starch, sugar, and chlorophyll. Sodium hydrosulfide application effectively mitigated (p < 0.05) the toxic effects of SCN− in rice seedlings by stimulating the processes of phosphorylation, dephosphorylation and new-synthesis of D1 protein in the PSII repair cycle, and increased the turnover of D1 protein to recover CO2 assimilation. Evidently, Pro treatment mainly enhanced (p < 0.05) the expression of magnesium chelatase (MgCh) and ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase (Rubisco) related genes under simulated SCN− stress, suggesting that the targeted repairing site in chloroplast by Pro was different from NaHS. The outcome of the present research contributes to a better understanding at molecular level for repairing of chloroplast functional disorder by NaHS and Pro at different key nodes under SCN− stress.

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