Abstract

Sodic-alkalinity is a more seriously limiting factor in agricultural productivity than salinity. Oat (Avena nuda) is a salt-tolerant crop species and is therefore useful in studying the physiological responses of cereals to alkalinity. We evaluated the differential effects of sodic-alkalinity on two naked oat lines, Caoyou1 and Yanke1. Seedlings of the two lines were exposed to 50 mM alkaline salt mixture of NaHCO3 and Na2CO3 (18:1 molar ratio; pH 8.5) for 2 weeks in a soil environment. Sodic-alkalinity exposure led the assimilation of abundant Na+ at similar concentrations in the organs of both lines. However, Caoyou1 showed much stronger growth than Yanke1, exhibiting a higher dry weight, total leaf area, and shoot height under sodic-alkalinity. Further analysis showed that Caoyou1 was more sodic-alkalinity tolerance than Yanke1. This was firstly because of differences in the oxidative stress defense mechanisms in leaves of the two lines. Antioxidant enzyme activities were either slightly elevated (catalase (CAT), ascorbate peroxidase (APX), guaiacol peroxidase (GP), glutathione reductase (GR)) or unaltered (superoxide dismutase (SOD)) in Caoyou1 leaves, but some enzyme (SOD, GPOX, GR) activities were significantly reduced in Yanke1. AnAPX1 transcript levels significantly increased in Caoyou1 under sodic-alkalinity conditions compared with Yanke1, indicating its better antioxidant capacity. Secondly, the related parameters of Mg2+ concentration, phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC) activity, and AnPEPC transcript levels in the leaves showed significantly higher values in Caoyou1 compared with Yanke1. This demonstrated the effective utilization by Caoyou1 of accumulated HCO3− in the irreversible reaction from phosphoenolpyruvate to oxaloacetate to produce inorganic phosphorus, which was elevated in Caoyou1 leaves under alkalinity stress. Overall, the results demonstrated that the greater sodic-alkalinity tolerance of Caoyou1 is the result of: (1) maintained antioxidant enzyme activities; and (2) a higher capacity for the phosphoenolpyruvate to oxaloacetate reactions, as shown by the higher PEPC activity, Mg2+ concentration, and total phosphorus concentration in its leaves, despite the lower soil pH.

Highlights

  • Soil sodic-alkalinity is an increasing environmental problem, leading to losses in agricultural production [1,2]

  • Yanke1 to sodic‐alkalinity conditions revealed that clearlythe inhibited growth

  • The current study clearly exhibited that the two oat lines differed in sodic-alkalinity tolerance, with Caoyou1 being more tolerant than Yanke1

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Summary

Introduction

Soil sodic-alkalinity is an increasing environmental problem, leading to losses in agricultural production [1,2]. Previous studies have reported that saline-alkalinity affects over 800 million hectares of land globally, and 10% of cultivated soils are subject to sodic-alkalinity [3,4]. The negative effects of salinity or sodic-alkalinity on plant growth divide into two major stress factors: osmotic and ionic stress [6]. Osmotic stress is an immediate phase that inhibits water uptake, whereas ionic stress develops after toxic Na+ ions have been assimilated into plant tissue at a level above the tolerance threshold [4]. Maintaining a higher K+ accumulation in plant tissue is crucial to plant salinity or sodic-alkalinity tolerance [4]. Under sodic-alkalinity conditions, abundant NaHCO3 or Na2 CO3 results in a high soil pH (above 8.5)

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