4.7 Article

Melatonin Alleviates Copper Toxicity via Improving ROS Metabolism and Antioxidant Defense Response in Tomato Seedlings

Journal

ANTIOXIDANTS
Volume 11, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/antiox11040758

Keywords

heavy metal (HM); copper stress (CS); tomato; melatonin (MT); reactive oxygen species (ROS); antioxidants

Funding

  1. China Earmarked Fund for Modern Agro-industry Technology Research System [CARS-23-B02]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [32172575]
  3. Youth Talent Fund of Henan Agricultural University [30501001]

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This study demonstrates that exogenous melatonin can significantly alleviate the dwarf phenotype and inhibit the reduction in plant growth caused by excessive copper stress in tomato plants. This effect is mainly achieved by inhibiting the generation of reactive oxygen species, enhancing antioxidant capacity, and regulating the expression of defense genes and melatonin biosynthesis-related genes.
The excessive accumulation of copper (Cu2+) has become a threat to worldwide crop production. Recently, it was revealed that melatonin (MT) could play a crucial role against heavy metal (HM) stresses in plants. However, the underlying mechanism of MT function acted upon by Cu2+ stress (CS) has not been substantiated in tomatoes. In the present work, we produced MT-rich tomato plants by foliar usage of MT, and MT-deficient tomato plants by employing a virus-induced gene silencing methodology and exogenous foliar application of MT synthesis inhibitor para-chlorophenylalanine (pCPA). The obtained results indicate that exogenous MT meaningfully alleviated the dwarf phenotype and impeded the reduction in plant growth caused by excess Cu2+. Furthermore, MT effectively restricted the generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and habilitated cellular integrity by triggering antioxidant enzyme activities, especially via CAT and APX, but not SOD and POD. In addition, MT increased nonenzymatic antioxidant activity, including FRAP and the GSH/GSSG and ASA/DHA ratios. MT usage improved the expression of several defense genes (CAT, APX, GR and MDHAR) and MT biosynthesis-related genes (TDC, SNAT and COMT). Taken together, our results preliminarily reveal that MT alleviates Cu2+ toxicity via ROS scavenging, enhancing antioxidant capacity when subjected to excessive Cu2+. These results build a solid foundation for developing new insights to solve problems related to CS.

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