4.7 Article

Physiological, Biochemical and Molecular Response of Different Winter Wheat Varieties under Drought Stress at Germination and Seedling Growth Stage

Journal

ANTIOXIDANTS
Volume 11, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/antiox11040693

Keywords

antioxidative response; dehydrins; drought; osmotic adjustment; transcription factors; wheat

Funding

  1. European Union [KK.01.1.1.04.0067]

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This study evaluated the physiological, biochemical, and molecular responses of six Croatian winter wheat varieties under drought stress at the germination/seedling growth stage. The results showed that different varieties exhibited different antioxidative and metabolic adaptation mechanisms in response to drought stress. Proline metabolism and antioxidative pathways played significant roles in wheat seedlings' response to drought stress.
Due to climate change in recent years, there has been an increasing water deficit during the winter wheat sowing period. This study evaluated six Croatian winter wheat varieties' physiological, biochemical, and molecular responses under two drought stress levels at the germination/seedling growth stage. Lipid peroxidation was mainly induced under both drought stress treatments, while the antioxidative response was variety-specific. The most significant role in the antioxidative response had glutathione along with the ascorbate-glutathione pathway. Under drought stress, wheat seedlings responded in proline accumulation that was correlated with the P5CS gene expression. Expression of genes encoding dehydrins (DHN5, WZY2) was highly induced under the drought stress in all varieties, while genes encoding transcription factors were differentially regulated. Expression of DREB1 was upregulated under severe drought stress in most varieties, while the expression of WRKY2 was downregulated or revealed control levels. Different mechanisms were shown to contribute to the drought tolerance in different varieties, which was mainly associated with osmotic adjustment and dehydrins expression. Identifying different mechanisms in drought stress response would advance our understanding of the complex strategies contributing to wheat tolerance to drought in the early growth stage and could contribute to variety selection useful for developing new drought-tolerant varieties.

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