Susceptibility and tolerance of rice crop to salt threat: Physiological and metabolic inspections

Salinity threat is estimated to reduce global rice production by 50%. Comprehensive analysis of the physiological and metabolite changes in rice plants from salinity stress (i.e. tolerant versus susceptible plants) is important to combat higher salinity conditions. In this study, we screened a total...

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Main Authors: Ma, Nyuk Ling, Che Lah, Wan Afifudeen, Abd. Kadir, Nisrin, Mustaqim, Mohamad, Rahmat, Zaidah, Ahmad, Aziz, Lam, Su Datt, Ismail, Mohd. Razi
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Published: Plos Org 2018
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Online Access:http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/85935/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0192732
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spelling my.utm.859352020-07-30T07:39:02Z http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/85935/ Susceptibility and tolerance of rice crop to salt threat: Physiological and metabolic inspections Ma, Nyuk Ling Che Lah, Wan Afifudeen Abd. Kadir, Nisrin Mustaqim, Mohamad Rahmat, Zaidah Ahmad, Aziz Lam, Su Datt Ismail, Mohd. Razi Q Science (General) Salinity threat is estimated to reduce global rice production by 50%. Comprehensive analysis of the physiological and metabolite changes in rice plants from salinity stress (i.e. tolerant versus susceptible plants) is important to combat higher salinity conditions. In this study, we screened a total of 92 genotypes and selected the most salinity tolerant line (SS1-14) and most susceptible line (SS2-18) to conduct comparative physiological and metabolome inspections. We demonstrated that the tolerant line managed to maintain their water and chlorophyll content with lower incidence of sodium ion accumulation. We also examined the antioxidant activities of these lines: production of ascorbate peroxidase (APX) and catalase (CAT) were significantly higher in the sensitive line while superoxide dismutase (SOD) was higher in the tolerant line. Partial least squares discriminant analysis (PLS-DA) score plots show significantly different response for both lines after the exposure to salinity stress. In the tolerant line, there was an upregulation of non-polar metabolites and production of sucrose, GABA and acetic acid, suggesting an important role in salinity adaptation. In contrast, glutamine and putrescine were noticeably high in the susceptible rice. Coordination of different strategies in tolerant and susceptible lines show that they responded differently after exposure to salt stress. These findings can assist crop development in terms of developing tolerance mechanisms for rice crops. Plos Org 2018 Article PeerReviewed Ma, Nyuk Ling and Che Lah, Wan Afifudeen and Abd. Kadir, Nisrin and Mustaqim, Mohamad and Rahmat, Zaidah and Ahmad, Aziz and Lam, Su Datt and Ismail, Mohd. Razi (2018) Susceptibility and tolerance of rice crop to salt threat: Physiological and metabolic inspections. Plos ONE, 13 (2). e0192732- e0192732. ISSN 1932-6203 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0192732
institution Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
building UTM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
content_source UTM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.utm.my/
topic Q Science (General)
spellingShingle Q Science (General)
Ma, Nyuk Ling
Che Lah, Wan Afifudeen
Abd. Kadir, Nisrin
Mustaqim, Mohamad
Rahmat, Zaidah
Ahmad, Aziz
Lam, Su Datt
Ismail, Mohd. Razi
Susceptibility and tolerance of rice crop to salt threat: Physiological and metabolic inspections
description Salinity threat is estimated to reduce global rice production by 50%. Comprehensive analysis of the physiological and metabolite changes in rice plants from salinity stress (i.e. tolerant versus susceptible plants) is important to combat higher salinity conditions. In this study, we screened a total of 92 genotypes and selected the most salinity tolerant line (SS1-14) and most susceptible line (SS2-18) to conduct comparative physiological and metabolome inspections. We demonstrated that the tolerant line managed to maintain their water and chlorophyll content with lower incidence of sodium ion accumulation. We also examined the antioxidant activities of these lines: production of ascorbate peroxidase (APX) and catalase (CAT) were significantly higher in the sensitive line while superoxide dismutase (SOD) was higher in the tolerant line. Partial least squares discriminant analysis (PLS-DA) score plots show significantly different response for both lines after the exposure to salinity stress. In the tolerant line, there was an upregulation of non-polar metabolites and production of sucrose, GABA and acetic acid, suggesting an important role in salinity adaptation. In contrast, glutamine and putrescine were noticeably high in the susceptible rice. Coordination of different strategies in tolerant and susceptible lines show that they responded differently after exposure to salt stress. These findings can assist crop development in terms of developing tolerance mechanisms for rice crops.
format Article
author Ma, Nyuk Ling
Che Lah, Wan Afifudeen
Abd. Kadir, Nisrin
Mustaqim, Mohamad
Rahmat, Zaidah
Ahmad, Aziz
Lam, Su Datt
Ismail, Mohd. Razi
author_facet Ma, Nyuk Ling
Che Lah, Wan Afifudeen
Abd. Kadir, Nisrin
Mustaqim, Mohamad
Rahmat, Zaidah
Ahmad, Aziz
Lam, Su Datt
Ismail, Mohd. Razi
author_sort Ma, Nyuk Ling
title Susceptibility and tolerance of rice crop to salt threat: Physiological and metabolic inspections
title_short Susceptibility and tolerance of rice crop to salt threat: Physiological and metabolic inspections
title_full Susceptibility and tolerance of rice crop to salt threat: Physiological and metabolic inspections
title_fullStr Susceptibility and tolerance of rice crop to salt threat: Physiological and metabolic inspections
title_full_unstemmed Susceptibility and tolerance of rice crop to salt threat: Physiological and metabolic inspections
title_sort susceptibility and tolerance of rice crop to salt threat: physiological and metabolic inspections
publisher Plos Org
publishDate 2018
url http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/85935/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0192732
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