Abstract

Cotton (Gosspium hirsutum L.) is classified as a salt tolerant crop. However, its yield and fiber quality are negatively affected by soil salinity. Studies on the enzymatic differences in sucrose metabolism under different soil salinity levels are lacking. Therefore, field experiments, using two cotton cultivars, CCRI-79 (salt-tolerant) and Simian 3 (salt-sensitive), were conducted in 2013 and 2014 at three different salinity levels (1.15 dS m-1 [low soil salinity], 6.00 dS m-1 [medium soil salinity], and 11.46 dS m-1 [high soil salinity]). The objective was to elucidate the effects of soil salinity on sucrose content and the activity of key enzymes that are related to sucrose metabolism in cotton fiber. Results showed that as the soil salinity increased, cellulose content, sucrose content, and sucrose transformation rate declined; the decreases in cellulose content and sucrose transformation rate caused by the increase in soil salinity were more in Simian 3 than those in CCRI-79. With increase in soil salinity, activities of sucrose metabolism enzymes sucrose phophate synthase (SPS), acidic invertase, and alkaline invertase were decreased, whereas sucrose synthase (SuSy) activity increased. However, the changes displayed in the SuSy and SPS activities in response to increase in soil salinity were different and the differences were large between the two cotton cultivars. These results illustrated that suppressed cellulose synthesis and sucrose metabolism under high soil salinity were mainly due to the change in SPS, SuSy, and invertase activities, and the difference in cellulose synthesis and sucrose metabolism in fiber for the two cotton cultivars in response to soil salinity was determined mainly by both SuSy and SPS activities.

Highlights

  • Salinity is one of the major environmental problems that challenges the plant growth and development in both developed and developing countries [1]

  • Soil salinity hampered cellulose synthesis, decreased the sucrose transformation rate, and influenced the activities of sucrose metabolizing enzymes in the two cotton cultivars examined in the present study

  • Differences in the sucrose metabolism and cellulose synthesis were observed in the two cultivars

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Summary

Introduction

Salinity is one of the major environmental problems that challenges the plant growth and development in both developed and developing countries [1]. Cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.) is an important natural fiber and oil crop. Cotton is classified as a salt-tolerant crops, with a salinity threshold of 7.7 dS m-1, the fiber strength, micronaire value, maturity ratio, and maturity percentage are drastically reduced with increase in salinity[2, 3]. Cotton is considered the most important textile crop grown worldwide[4]. Fiber yield and quality are the main criteria for cotton production

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