4.7 Article

Bio-Stimulating Effect of Natural Polysaccharides from Lobularia maritima on Durum Wheat Seedlings: Improved Plant Growth, Salt Stress Tolerance by Modulating Biochemical Responses and Ion Homeostasis

Journal

PLANTS-BASEL
Volume 11, Issue 15, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/plants11151991

Keywords

Lobularia maritima; polysaccharide; durum wheat; biostimulant; antioxidant enzymes; salt stress

Categories

Funding

  1. Tunisian Ministry of Higher Education and Scientific Research [2019-2022]
  2. University of Western Australia

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This study investigated the use of natural polysaccharides derived from the halophyte plant Lobularia maritima as a biostimulant in durum wheat seedlings under salt stress. The polysaccharide extract stimulated wheat growth and provided tolerance to plants against NaCl stress by improving membrane stability, antioxidant activities, leaf chlorophyll fluorescence, and regulating ion homeostasis. The expression profile analyses of stress-related genes revealed the induction of key genes in durum wheat even under unstressed conditions. This study highlights the potential of using polysaccharide extract as a biostimulant in sustainable and organic agriculture.
Bioactivities of polysaccharides derived from halophyte plants have gained attention in recent years. The use of biostimulants in agriculture is an innovative method of dealing with environmental stressors affecting plant growth and development. Here, we investigated the use of natural polysaccharides derived from the halophyte plant Lobularia maritima (PSLm) as a biostimulant in durum wheat seedlings under salt stress. Treatment with polysaccharide extract (0.5, 1, and 2 mg/mL PSLm) stimulated in vitro wheat growth, including germination, shoot length, root length, and fresh weight. PSLm at 2 mg/mL provided tolerance to plants against NaCl stress with improved membrane stability and low electrolyte leakage, increased antioxidant activities (catalase (CAT), peroxidase (POD), and superoxide dismutase (SOD)), enhanced leaf chlorophyll fluorescence, proline, and total sugar contents, decreased lipid peroxidation (MDA), and reactive oxygen species (H2O2) levels, and coordinated the efflux and compartmentation of intracellular ions. The expression profile analyses of ten stress-related genes (NHX1, HKT1.4, SOS1, SOD, CAT, GA20-ox1, GA3-ox1, NRT1.1, NRT2.1, and GS) using RT-qPCR revealed the induction of several key genes in durum wheat growing in media supplemented with PSLm extract, even in unstressed conditions that could be related to the observed tolerance. This study revealed that PSLm extract contributes to salt tolerance in durum wheat seedlings, thereby enhancing their reactive oxygen species scavenging ability, and provided evidence for exploring PSLm as a plant biostimulant for sustainable and organic agriculture.

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