Roles of Exogenous -Lipoic Acid and Cysteine in Mitigation of Drought Stress and Restoration of Grain Quality in Wheat
Amr Elkelish; Mohamed M. El-Mogy; Gniewko Niedbała; Magdalena Piekutowska; Mohamed A. M. Atia; Hamada, Maha; Mostafa Shahin; Soumya Mukherjee; Ahmed Abou El-Yazied; Mohamed Shebl; Mohammad Shah Jahan; Ali Osman; Hany G. Abd El-Gawad; Hatem Ashour; Reham Farag; Samy Selim; Mohamed F. M. Ibrahim;
Abstract
Cysteine (Cys) and -lipoic acid (ALA) are naturally occurring antioxidants (sulfurcontaining
compounds) that can protect plants against a wide spectrum of environmental stresses.
However, up to now, there are no conclusive data on their integrative roles in mitigation of drought
stress in wheat plants. Here, we studied the influence of ALA at 0.02 mM (grain dipping precultivation
treatment) and Cys (25 and 50 ppm as a foliar application) under well watered and
deficit irrigation (100% and 70% of recommended dose). The results showed that deficit irrigation
markedly caused obvious cellular oxidative damage as indicated by elevating the malondialdehyde
(MDA) and hydrogen peroxide content (H2O2). Moreover, water stressed plants exhibited multiple
changes in physiological metabolism, which affected the quantitative and qualitative variables of
grain yield. The enzymatic antioxidants, including superoxide dismutase (SOD), ascorbate peroxidase
(APX), catalase (CAT) and peroxidase (POX) were improved by Cys application. SOD and
APX had the same response when treated with ALA, but CAT and POX did not. Moreover, both
studied molecules stimulated chlorophyll (Chl) and osmolytes’ biosynthesis. In contrast, the Chl
a/b ratio was decreased, while flavonoids were not affected by either of the examined molecules.
Interestingly, all above-mentioned changes were associated with an improvement in the scavenging capacity of reactive oxygen species (ROS), leaf relative water content (RWC), grain number, total
grain yield, weight of 1000 kernels, gluten index, falling number, and alveographic parameters (P,
W, and P/L values). Furthermore, heatmap plot analysis revealed several significant correlations
between different studied parameters, which may explore the importance of applied Cys and ALA
as effective compounds in wheat cultivation under water deficit conditions.
compounds) that can protect plants against a wide spectrum of environmental stresses.
However, up to now, there are no conclusive data on their integrative roles in mitigation of drought
stress in wheat plants. Here, we studied the influence of ALA at 0.02 mM (grain dipping precultivation
treatment) and Cys (25 and 50 ppm as a foliar application) under well watered and
deficit irrigation (100% and 70% of recommended dose). The results showed that deficit irrigation
markedly caused obvious cellular oxidative damage as indicated by elevating the malondialdehyde
(MDA) and hydrogen peroxide content (H2O2). Moreover, water stressed plants exhibited multiple
changes in physiological metabolism, which affected the quantitative and qualitative variables of
grain yield. The enzymatic antioxidants, including superoxide dismutase (SOD), ascorbate peroxidase
(APX), catalase (CAT) and peroxidase (POX) were improved by Cys application. SOD and
APX had the same response when treated with ALA, but CAT and POX did not. Moreover, both
studied molecules stimulated chlorophyll (Chl) and osmolytes’ biosynthesis. In contrast, the Chl
a/b ratio was decreased, while flavonoids were not affected by either of the examined molecules.
Interestingly, all above-mentioned changes were associated with an improvement in the scavenging capacity of reactive oxygen species (ROS), leaf relative water content (RWC), grain number, total
grain yield, weight of 1000 kernels, gluten index, falling number, and alveographic parameters (P,
W, and P/L values). Furthermore, heatmap plot analysis revealed several significant correlations
between different studied parameters, which may explore the importance of applied Cys and ALA
as effective compounds in wheat cultivation under water deficit conditions.
Other data
| Title | Roles of Exogenous -Lipoic Acid and Cysteine in Mitigation of Drought Stress and Restoration of Grain Quality in Wheat | Authors | Amr Elkelish; Mohamed M. El-Mogy; Gniewko Niedbała; Magdalena Piekutowska; Mohamed A. M. Atia; Hamada, Maha ; Mostafa Shahin; Soumya Mukherjee; Ahmed Abou El-Yazied; Mohamed Shebl; Mohammad Shah Jahan; Ali Osman; Hany G. Abd El-Gawad; Hatem Ashour; Reham Farag; Samy Selim; Mohamed F. M. Ibrahim | Keywords | wheat;water stress;antioxidant capacity;grain quality;alveographic parameters;alpha-lipoic acid;cysteine | Issue Date | 28-Oct-2021 | Publisher | MDPI | Journal | Plants | DOI | https://doi.org/10.3390/plants10112318 |
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