Hydrogen sulfde priming enhanced salinity tolerance in sunfower by modulating ion hemostasis, cellular redox balance, and gene expression

Abeer Abdelrazk Younis; Mansour, Mohamed Magdy; Mansour, Mohamed Magdy F.;

Abstract


Background The salinity threat represents an environmental challenge that drastically affects plant growth and yield.
Besides salinity stress, the escalating world population will greatly influence the world’s food security in the future.
Therefore, searching for effective strategies to improve crop salinity resilience and sustain agricultural productivity
under high salinity is a must. Seed priming is a reliable, simple, low-risk, and low-cost technique. Therefore, this work
aimed to evaluate the impact of seed priming with 0.5 mM NaHS, as a donor of H2S, in mitigating salinity effects
on sunflower seedlings. Primed and nonprime seeds were established in nonsaline soil irrigated with tape water
for 14 d, and then exposed to 150 mM NaCl for 7 d.
Results Salinity stress significantly reduced the seedling growth, biomass accumulation, K+, Ca2+, and salinity tolerance index while elevating Na+ uptake and translocation. Salinity-induced adverse effects were significantly alleviated
by H2S priming. Upregulation in gene expression (HaSOS2, HaGST) under NaCl stress was further enhanced by H2S
priming. Also, H2S reduced lipid peroxidation, electrolyte leakage, and H2O2 content, but elevated the antioxidant
defense system. NaCl-induced levels of ascorbate, glutathione, and α tocopherol, as well as the activities of AsA-GSH
cycle enzymes: ascorbate peroxidase, monodehydroascorbate reductase, dehydroascorbate reductase, glutathione
reductase, and glutathione S-transferase, were further enhanced by H2S priming. Increased level of H2S and total thiol
by NaCl was also further stimulated by H2S priming.
Conclusion H2S priming has proved to be an efficient strategy to improve sunflower seedlings’ salinity tolerance
by retaining ion homeostasis, detoxifying oxidative damage, modulating gene expression involved in ion homeostasis
and ROS scavenging, and boosting endogenous H2S. These findings suggested that H2S acts as a regulatory molecule
activating the functional processes responsible for sunflower adaptive mechanisms and could be adopted as a crucial
crop management strategy to combat saline conditions. However, it would be of great interest to conduct further
studies in the natural saline field to broaden our understanding of crop adaptive mechanisms and to support our
claims.


Other data

Title Hydrogen sulfde priming enhanced salinity tolerance in sunfower by modulating ion hemostasis, cellular redox balance, and gene expression
Authors Abeer Abdelrazk Younis; Mansour, Mohamed Magdy; Mansour, Mohamed Magdy F. 
Keywords Antioxidants;AsA-GSH system;Gene expression;Hydrogen sulfde;Redox balance;Salinity stress;Sunfower
Issue Date 30-Oct-2023
Publisher Springer
Journal BMC Plant Biology 
Volume 23
Start page 525
DOI https://doi.org/10.1186/s12870-023-04552-w

Attached Files

File Description SizeFormat Existing users please Login
Mansour23, HS priming.pdf1.94 MBAdobe PDF    Request a copy
Recommend this item

Similar Items from Core Recommender Database

Google ScholarTM

Check



Items in Ain Shams Scholar are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.