Salt tolerance in Machilus faberi: elucidating growth and physiological adaptations to saline environments

Adversity stress is the main environmental factor limiting plant growth and development, including salt and other stress factors. This study delves into the adaptability and salt tolerance mechanisms of Machilus faberi Hemsl, a species with potential for cultivation in salinized areas. We subjected...

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Main Authors: Mo, Qiong, Liu, Yang, Wei, Haohui, Jiang, Liyuan, Wu, En, Lin, Ling, Yang, Qihong, Yu, Xiaoying, Yan, Lihong, Li, Yanlin
Other Authors: School of Biological Sciences
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2024
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/179874
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1798742024-09-02T15:32:22Z Salt tolerance in Machilus faberi: elucidating growth and physiological adaptations to saline environments Mo, Qiong Liu, Yang Wei, Haohui Jiang, Liyuan Wu, En Lin, Ling Yang, Qihong Yu, Xiaoying Yan, Lihong Li, Yanlin School of Biological Sciences Medicine, Health and Life Sciences Salt stress Machilus faberi Hemsl Adversity stress is the main environmental factor limiting plant growth and development, including salt and other stress factors. This study delves into the adaptability and salt tolerance mechanisms of Machilus faberi Hemsl, a species with potential for cultivation in salinized areas. We subjected the plants to various salt concentrations to observe their growth responses and to assess key physiological and biochemical indicators. The results revealed that under high salt concentrations (500 and 700 mmol-1/L), symptoms such as leaf yellowing, wilting, and eventual death were observed. Notably, plant height and shoot growth ceased on the 14th day of exposure. Chlorophyll content (a, b, total a + b, and the a/b ratio) initially increased but subsequently decreased under varying levels of salt stress. Similarly, the net photosynthetic rate, stomatal conductance, leaf water content, and root activity significantly declined under these conditions. Moreover, we observed an increase in malondialdehyde levels and relative conductivity, indicative of cellular damage and stress. The activity of superoxide dismutase and ascorbate peroxidase initially increased and then diminished with prolonged stress, whereas peroxidase activity consistently increased. Levels of proline and soluble protein exhibited an upward trend, contrasting with the fluctuating pattern of soluble sugars, which decreased initially but increased subsequently. In conclusion, M. faberi exhibits a degree of tolerance to salt stress, albeit with growth limitations when concentrations exceed 300 mmol-1/L. These results shed light on the plant's mechanisms of responding to salt stress and provide a theoretical foundation for its cultivation and application in salt-affected regions. Published version This work was funded by the Forestry Science and Technology Innovation Foundation of Hunan Forestry Bureau science and technology innovation project (XLKY202213), the Hunan Province for Distinguished Young Scholarship (XLKJ202205), the Foundation of Changsha Municipal Science and Technology Bureau (KQ2202227), the key project of Hunan Provincial Education Department (22A0155), the Forestry Bureau for Industrialization Management of Hunan Province (2130221),the Graduate Innovation Project of Hunan Province (2023XC108), the College Student Innovation and Entrepreneurship Project of China (S202310537005), and the Project fund of Hunan Province Philosophy and Social Science Achievements Evaluation Committee (XSP20YBZ123). 2024-08-28T07:22:29Z 2024-08-28T07:22:29Z 2024 Journal Article Mo, Q., Liu, Y., Wei, H., Jiang, L., Wu, E., Lin, L., Yang, Q., Yu, X., Yan, L. & Li, Y. (2024). Salt tolerance in Machilus faberi: elucidating growth and physiological adaptations to saline environments. Biology, 13(2), 75-. https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biology13020075 2079-7737+ https://hdl.handle.net/10356/179874 10.3390/biology13020075 38392294 2-s2.0-85190148704 2 13 75 en Biology © 2024 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https:// creativecommons.org/licenses/by/ 4.0/). application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
Salt stress
Machilus faberi Hemsl
spellingShingle Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
Salt stress
Machilus faberi Hemsl
Mo, Qiong
Liu, Yang
Wei, Haohui
Jiang, Liyuan
Wu, En
Lin, Ling
Yang, Qihong
Yu, Xiaoying
Yan, Lihong
Li, Yanlin
Salt tolerance in Machilus faberi: elucidating growth and physiological adaptations to saline environments
description Adversity stress is the main environmental factor limiting plant growth and development, including salt and other stress factors. This study delves into the adaptability and salt tolerance mechanisms of Machilus faberi Hemsl, a species with potential for cultivation in salinized areas. We subjected the plants to various salt concentrations to observe their growth responses and to assess key physiological and biochemical indicators. The results revealed that under high salt concentrations (500 and 700 mmol-1/L), symptoms such as leaf yellowing, wilting, and eventual death were observed. Notably, plant height and shoot growth ceased on the 14th day of exposure. Chlorophyll content (a, b, total a + b, and the a/b ratio) initially increased but subsequently decreased under varying levels of salt stress. Similarly, the net photosynthetic rate, stomatal conductance, leaf water content, and root activity significantly declined under these conditions. Moreover, we observed an increase in malondialdehyde levels and relative conductivity, indicative of cellular damage and stress. The activity of superoxide dismutase and ascorbate peroxidase initially increased and then diminished with prolonged stress, whereas peroxidase activity consistently increased. Levels of proline and soluble protein exhibited an upward trend, contrasting with the fluctuating pattern of soluble sugars, which decreased initially but increased subsequently. In conclusion, M. faberi exhibits a degree of tolerance to salt stress, albeit with growth limitations when concentrations exceed 300 mmol-1/L. These results shed light on the plant's mechanisms of responding to salt stress and provide a theoretical foundation for its cultivation and application in salt-affected regions.
author2 School of Biological Sciences
author_facet School of Biological Sciences
Mo, Qiong
Liu, Yang
Wei, Haohui
Jiang, Liyuan
Wu, En
Lin, Ling
Yang, Qihong
Yu, Xiaoying
Yan, Lihong
Li, Yanlin
format Article
author Mo, Qiong
Liu, Yang
Wei, Haohui
Jiang, Liyuan
Wu, En
Lin, Ling
Yang, Qihong
Yu, Xiaoying
Yan, Lihong
Li, Yanlin
author_sort Mo, Qiong
title Salt tolerance in Machilus faberi: elucidating growth and physiological adaptations to saline environments
title_short Salt tolerance in Machilus faberi: elucidating growth and physiological adaptations to saline environments
title_full Salt tolerance in Machilus faberi: elucidating growth and physiological adaptations to saline environments
title_fullStr Salt tolerance in Machilus faberi: elucidating growth and physiological adaptations to saline environments
title_full_unstemmed Salt tolerance in Machilus faberi: elucidating growth and physiological adaptations to saline environments
title_sort salt tolerance in machilus faberi: elucidating growth and physiological adaptations to saline environments
publishDate 2024
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/179874
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