4.7 Article

Sustainable Biochar and/or Melatonin Improve Salinity Tolerance in Borage Plants by Modulating Osmotic Adjustment, Antioxidants, and Ion Homeostasis

Journal

PLANTS-BASEL
Volume 11, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/plants11060765

Keywords

biochar; eco-physiology; melatonin; osmotic adjustment; oxidative injury; salinity stress; water status

Categories

Funding

  1. Princess Nourah Bint Abdulrahman University Researchers [PNURSP2022R93]
  2. Princess Nourah Bint Abdulrahman University, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia

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Salinity is a crucial factor affecting agricultural sustainability in arid and semi-arid regions. This study explores the potential of using biochar and melatonin to mitigate the negative impacts of salt toxicity on borage plants. The results show that the addition of biochar and melatonin can improve plant water status, enhance osmotic adjustment capacity, and activate antioxidant responses, leading to increased growth and yield in salt-affected plants.
Salinity is persistently a decisive feature confining agricultural sustainability and food security in arid and semi-arid regions. Biochar (Bi) has been advocated as a means of lessening climate changes by sequestering carbon, concurrently supplying energy and rising crop productivity under normal or stressful conditions. Melatonin (Mt) has been shown to mediate numerous biochemical pathways and play important roles in mitigating multi-stress factors. However, their integrated roles in mitigating salt toxicity remain largely inexpressible. A completely randomized design was conducted to realize the remediation potential of Bi and/or Mt in attenuation salinity injury on borage plants by evaluating its effects on growth, water status, osmotic adjustment, antioxidant capacity, ions, and finally the yield. Salinity stress significantly decreased the plant growth and attributed yield when compared with non-salinized control plants. The depression effect of salinity on borage productivity was associated with the reduction in photosynthetic pigment and ascorbic acid (AsA) concentrations, potassium (K+) percentage, K+-translocation, and potassium/sodium ratio as well as catalase (CAT) activity. Additionally, borage plants' water status was disrupted by salinity through decreasing water content (WC), relative water content (RWC), and water retention capacity (WTC), as well as water potential (Psi(w)), osmotic potential (Psi(s)), and turgor potential (Psi(p)). Moreover, salinity stress evoked oxidative bursts via hyper-accumulation of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) and malondialdehyde (MDA), as well as protein carbonyl, which is associated with membrane dysfunction. The oxidative burst was connected with the hyper-accumulation of sodium (Na+) and chloride (Cl-) in plant tissues, coupled with osmolytes' accumulation and accelerating plants' osmotic adjustment (OA) capacity. The addition of Bi and/or Mt had a positive effect in mitigating salinity on borage plants by reducing Cl-, Na+, and Na+-translocation, and oxidative biomarkers as well as Psi(w), Psi(s), and Psi(p). Moreover, Bi and/or Mt addition to salt-affected plants increased plant growth and yield by improving plant water status and OA capacity associated with the activation of antioxidant capacity and osmolytes accumulation as well as increased photosynthetic pigments, K+, and K+/Na+ ratio. Considering these observations, Bi and/or Mt can be used as a promising approach for enhancing the productivity of salt-affected borage plants due to their roles in sustaining water relations, rising solutes synthesis, progressing OA, improving redox homeostasis, and antioxidant aptitude.

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