Abstract

Drought stress commonly happens more than once during the life cycle of perennial trees. Stress memory endows better capacity to cope with repeated stresses for plants, while the underlying mechanisms are not fully elucidated. In this study, 2-month-old saplings of two mulberry cultivars (Husang32 and 7307 of Morus multicaulis) with or without an early soil water deficit were subjected to subsequent drought for 9 days. The shoot height growth, biomass production, stable carbon isotope discrimination, phytohormones, reactive oxygen species (ROS), osmotic substances and antioxidant enzymes were analyzed after the first and the second drought, respectively. Drought priming saplings sustained comparable or slightly higher biomass accumulation under the second drought than those non-priming. They also exhibited decreased levels of soluble sugars, free proline and soluble proteins, lower accumulation of malonaldehyde (MDA) and superoxide anion (O2•−), reduced activities of superoxide dismutase (SOD) and peroxidase (POD) compared to non-priming plants. Moreover, cultivar Husang32 exhibited elevated abscisic acid (ABA) and jasmonic acid (JA) where 7307 displayed opposite changes. PCA suggests that MDA, H2O2, free proline, SOD and POD in roots, and ROS, soluble sugars and glutamate reductase in leaves are dominant factors influenced by stress memory. ABA and JA in leaves also play important roles in exerting drought imprints. Collectively, stress memory can confer mulberry resistance to recurrent drought via combined regulations of antioxidative protection, osmotic adjustment and phytohormonal responses.

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