Abstract

Salicylic acid (SA) plays a role in several physiological processes in plants. Exogenously applied SA is a promising tool to reduce stress sensitivity. However, the mode of action may depend on how the treatment was performed and environmental conditions may alter the effects of SA. In the present study the physiological and biochemical effects of different modes of application (soaking seeds prior sowing; spraying leaves with 0.5 mM NaSA) were compared at normal and moderately elevated temperatures (4 h; 35°C) in Brachypodium distachyon (L.) P. Beauv. plants. While soaking the seeds stimulated plant growth, spraying caused mild stress, as indicated by the chlorophyll-a fluorescence induction parameters and changes in certain protective compounds, such as glutathione, flavonoids or antioxidant enzymes. Elevated temperature also caused an increase in the glutathione-S-transferase activity, and this increase was more pronounced in plants pre-treated with NaSA. Both seed soaking or spraying with NaSA and exposure to heat treatment at 35°C reduced the abscisic acid levels in the leaves. In contrast to abscisic acid, the jasmonic acid level in the leaves were increased by both spraying and heat treatment. The present results suggest that different modes of application may induce different physiological processes, after which plants respond differently to heat treatment. Since these results were obtained with a model plants, further experiments are required to clarify how these changes occur in crop plants, especially in cereals.

Highlights

  • Salicylic acid (SA) serves as a signal molecule, and may induce various responses under biotic and abiotic stress conditions [1,2,3,4,5]

  • It was recently shown that the induction of flavonoid biosynthesis pathways in wheat plants varied with the mode of SA treatment [16]

  • The present work involved an analogous experiment on the monocot model plant Brachypodium dystachion with another important abiotic stressor, the heat, while the acidic form of SA was replaced by 0.5 mM NaSA

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Summary

Introduction

Salicylic acid (SA) serves as a signal molecule, and may induce various responses under biotic and abiotic stress conditions [1,2,3,4,5]. Applied SA can be effectively used to improve the stress tolerance of various plant species. SA has been applied in different ways, for example by spraying the leaves, irrigating the plants with SA [6,7,8], or soaking seeds in SA solution before sowing [9,10,11,12]. Na-salicylate and heat stress in Brachypodium plants

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