Abstract

This study aimed to investigate the inhibitory mechanism of root growth and to compare antioxidative responses in two wheat cultivars, drought-tolerant Ningchun and drought-sensitive Xihan, exposed to different NaCl concentrations. Ningchun exhibited lower germination rate, seedling growth, and lipid peroxidation than Xihan when exposed to salinity. The loss of cell viability was correlated with the inhibition of root growth induced by NaCl stress. Moreover, treatments with H2O2 scavenger dimethylthiourea and catalase (CAT) partly blocked salinity-induced negative effects on root growth and cell viability. Besides, the enhancement of superoxide radical and H2O2 levels, and the stimulation of CAT and diamine oxidase (DAO) as well as the inhibition of glutathione reductase (GR) were observed in two wheat roots treated with salinity. However, hydroxyl radical content increased only in Xihan roots under NaCl treatment, and the changes of soluble peroxidase (POD), ascorbate peroxidase (APX), superoxide dismutase (SOD), and cell-wall-bound POD activities were different in drought-tolerant Ningchun and drought-sensitive Xihan exposed to different NaCl concentrations. In conclusion, salinity might induce the loss of cell viability via a pathway associated with extracellular H2O2 generation, which was the primary reason leading to the inhibition of root growth in two wheat cultivars. Here, it was also suggested that increased H2O2 accumulation in the roots of drought-tolerant Ningchun might be due to decreased POD and GR activities as well as enhanced cell-wall-bound POD and DAO ones, while the inhibition of APX and GR as well as the stimulation of SOD and DAO was responsible for the elevation of H2O2 level in drought-sensitive Xihan roots.

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