4.3 Article

Ethylene-dependent effects of fusaric acid on the photosynthetic activity of tomato plants

Journal

PHOTOSYNTHETICA
Volume 59, Issue 2, Pages 337-348

Publisher

ACAD SCIENCES CZECH REPUBLIC, INST EXPERIMENTAL BOTANY
DOI: 10.32615/ps.2021.029

Keywords

assimilation; electrolyte leakage; lipid peroxidation; mycotoxin; photosystem; stomatal conductance

Categories

Funding

  1. National Research, Development and Innovation Office of Hungary -NKFIH [NKFIH FK 124871]
  2. New National Excellence Program of the Ministry of Human Capacities [UNKP-20-3-SZTE-512, UNKP-20-5]
  3. Janos Bolyai Research Scholarship of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences
  4. University of Szeged Open Access Fund [5156]

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Fusaric acid induces significant ethylene emission in tomato plants, affecting photosynthetic activity and showing Nr plants are more sensitive to the toxin.
Fusaric acid (FA) is one of the potential toxins produced by pathogenic Fusariuin species which exerts oxidative stress and cell death in plants. In this work, the effects of different concentrations of FA were investigated on the photosynthetic activity in leaves of wild type and Never ripe (Nr) tomato plants to reveal the potential role of ethylene under mycotoxin exposure. FA induced a significant ethylene emission from leaves in a concentration- and time-dependent manner. FA (1 mM) decreased the maximal and effective quantum yields of PSII and PSI in both tomato genotypes but photoprotective processes, such as the nonphotochemical quenching and the cyclic electron flow. were activated more effectively in Nr plants. However, the lipid peroxidation was higher in leaves of Nr. Our result confirmed that Nr plants were more sensitive to FA phytotoxicity suggesting the key role of ethylene in the activation of defense responses.

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