4.5 Article

Strigolactone is involved in nitric oxide-enhanced the salt resistance in tomato seedlings

Journal

JOURNAL OF PLANT RESEARCH
Volume 135, Issue 2, Pages 337-350

Publisher

SPRINGER JAPAN KK
DOI: 10.1007/s10265-022-01371-2

Keywords

Antioxidant; Photosynthetic; Salinity; S-Nitrosoglutathione

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [32072559, 31860568, 31560563, 31160398, 32102370]
  2. National Key Research and Development Program [2018YFD1000800]
  3. Research Fund of Higher Education of Gansu, China [2018C-14, 2019B-082]
  4. Natural Science Foundation of Gansu Province, China [1606RJZA073, 1606RJZA077]

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Both strigolactones and nitric oxide have synergistic effects on tomato salt tolerance, and the synthesis inhibitor of strigolactones can suppress the promoting effect of nitric oxide on tomato growth. Under salt stress, nitric oxide and strigolactones treatment can increase the content of endogenous strigolactones in tomato seedlings and improve the photosynthetic pigment content, antioxidant capacity, and gene expression levels.
Both strigolactones (SLs) and nitric oxide (NO) are regulatory signals with diverse roles during stress responses. At present, the interaction and mechanism of SLs and NO in tomato salt tolerance remain unclear. In the current study, tomato 'Micro-Tom' was used to study the roles and interactions of SLs and NO in salinity stress tolerance. The results show that 15 mu M SLs synthetic analogs GR24 and 10 mu M NO donor S-nitrosoglutathione (GSNO) promoted seedling growth under salt stress. TIS108 (an inhibitor of strigolactone synthesis) suppressed the positive roles of NO in tomato growth under salt stress, indicating that endogenous SLs might be involved in NO-induced salt response in tomato seedlings. Meanwhile, under salt stress, GSNO or GR24 treatment induced the increase of endogenous SLs content in tomato seedlings. Moreover, GR24 or GSNO treatment effectively increased the content of chlorophyll, carotenoids and ascorbic acid (ASA), and enhanced the activities of antioxidant enzymes (superoxide dismutase, peroxidase, catalase, and ascorbate peroxidase), glutathione reductase (GR) and cleavage dioxygenase (CCD) enzyme. Additionally, GSNO or GR24 treatment also up-regulated the expression of SLs synthesis genes (SlCCD7, SlCCD8, SlD27 and SlMAX1) and its signal transduction genes (SlD14 and SlMAX2) in tomato seedlings under salt stress. While, a strigolactone synthesis inhibitor TIS108 blocked the increase of endogenous SLs, chlorophyll, carotenoids and ASA content, and antioxidant enzyme, GR, CCD enzyme activity and SLs-related gene expression levels induced by GSNO. Thus, SLs may play an important role in NO-enhanced salinity tolerance in tomato seedlings by increasing photosynthetic pigment content, enhancing antioxidant capacity and improving endogenous SLs synthesis.

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