Journal
PHOTOCHEMICAL & PHOTOBIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
Volume 18, Issue 8, Pages 1945-1962Publisher
SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1039/c8pp00491a
Keywords
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Funding
- Norwegian Research Council through its Centre of Excellence funding scheme [223268/F50]
- Norwegian University of Life Sciences
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Exposure to ambient UV-B radiation may prime protective responses towards various stressors in plants, though information about interactive effects of UV-B and gamma radiation is scarce. Here, we aimed to test whether UV-B exposure could prime acclimatisation mechanisms contributing to tolerance to low-moderate gamma radiation levels in Scots pine seedlings, and concurrently whether simultaneous UV-B and gamma exposure may have an additive adverse effect on seedlings that had previously not encountered either of these stressors. Responses to simultaneous UV-B (0.35 W m(-2)) and gamma radiation (10.2-125 mGy h(-1)) for 6 days with or without UV-B pre-exposure (0.35 W m(-2), 4 days) were studied across various levels of organisation, as compared to effects of either radiation type. In contrast to UV-B, and regardless of UV-B presence, gamma radiation at >= 42.9 mGy h(-1) caused increased formation of reactive oxygen species and reduced shoot length, and reduced root length at 125 mGy h(-1). In all experiments there was a gamma dose rate-dependent increase in DNA damage at >= 10.8 mGy h(-1), generally with additional UV-B-induced damage. Gamma-induced growth inhibition and gamma- and UV-B-induced DNA damage were still visible 44 days post-irradiation, even at 20.7 mGy h(-1), probably due to genomic instability, but this was reversed after 8 months. In conclusion, there was no evidence of a protective effect of UV-B on gamma-induced growth inhibition and DNA damage in Scots pine, and no additive adverse effect of gamma and UV-B radiation on growth in spite of the additional UV-B-induced DNA damage.
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