4.6 Article

Biochar and Selenium Nanoparticles Induce Water Transporter Genes for Sustaining Carbon Assimilation and Grain Production in Salt-Stressed Wheat

Journal

JOURNAL OF PLANT GROWTH REGULATION
Volume 42, Issue 3, Pages 1522-1543

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00344-022-10636-y

Keywords

Oxidative stress; Osmolytes; Ion homeostasis; Water relations; Grain yield

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In this study, a controlled environment experiment was conducted to investigate how the physiological changes in wheat leaves during the vegetative phase regulate the final grain yield in salt-affected soils. The study also explored the protective effects of amendments such as biochar and selenium-chitosan nanoparticles on salt-injured wheat plants. The results showed that salt stress caused cellular damage in the leaves, leading to reduced biomass production and grain yield loss. However, the addition of biochar and selenium-chitosan nanoparticles mitigated the salt-induced injury and restored ion balance and carbon assimilation in salt-stressed wheat plants.
In a controlled environment experiment, we studied how physiological changes in leaves during the vegetative phase regulate final grain yield of wheat crops in salt-affected soils. We also hypothesized that amendments such as biochar (SB) and selenium-chitosan nanoparticles (Se-NPs) can protect wheat plants from salt injury. 20-day-old wheat plants were submitted to 4-week salt stress (3000 ppm NaCl). Soybean straw biochar was mixed with soil media at planting and Se-NPs (30 ppm) was sprayed 5 days after the first salt stress treatment. At the end of 4-week Se-NPs treatment, one set of plants was harvested for studying leaf level physiological changes. The salt-stressed plants accumulated significantly high leaf Na+ (similar to 13-fold increase), which trigged oxidative and osmotic damage. This salt-induced cellular injury was evident from significantly high levels of lipid membrane peroxidation and inhibited photosynthesis. Our study suggested that leaf physiological impairment in wheat plants was translated into poor biomass production and grain yield loss at crop maturity. Compared with control, salt-stressed plants produced 43% lesser biomass during vegetative phase, and 62% lesser grain yield at maturity. Amendments such as SB and Se-NPs protected the plants from salt-induced cellular injury by restricting Na+ transport toward leaf tissues. Plants treated with NaCl + SB + Se-NPs accumulated 50% less Na+ concentrations in leaves compared with NaCl-treated plants. Our study also suggested that SB and Se-NPs can restore ionic homeostasis and carbon assimilation in salt-stressed wheat by upregulating key transporter genes in leaves.

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