4.7 Article Proceedings Paper

Phenotypic and metabolic responses to drought and salinity of four contrasting lentil accessions

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BOTANY
Volume 66, Issue 18, Pages 5467-5480

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/jxb/erv208

Keywords

Drought stress; lentil; metabolite profiling; phenotypic traits; salinity; seed germination

Categories

Funding

  1. European Union [284443]
  2. German Plant Phenotyping Network (DPPN) - German Federal Ministry of Education and Research [031A053]

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Automated imaging-based plant phenotyping combined with GC-MS-based metabolite profiling of four lentil accessions differing in their drought and salt tolerance shows common and specific responses and yields characteristic stress markers.Drought and salinity are among the major abiotic stresses which, often inter-relatedly, adversely affect plant growth and productivity. Plant stress responses depend on the type of stress, on its intensity, on the species, and also on the genotype. Different accessions of a species may have evolved different mechanisms to cope with stress and to complete their life cycles. This study is focused on lentil, an important Mediterranean legume with high quality protein for the human diet. The effects of salinity and drought on germination and early growth of Castelluccio di Norcia (CAST), Pantelleria (PAN), Ustica (UST), and Eston (EST) accessions were evaluated to identify metabolic and phenotypic traits related to drought and/or salinity stress tolerance. The results showed a relationship between imposed stresses and performance of the cultivars. According to germination frequencies, the accession ranking was as follows: NaCl resistant > susceptible, PAN > UST > CAST > EST; polyethylene glycol (PEG) resistant > susceptible, CAST > UST > EST > PAN. Seedling tolerance rankings were: NaCl resistant > susceptible, CAST a parts per thousand UST > PAN a parts per thousand EST; PEG resistant > susceptible, CAST > EST a parts per thousand UST > PAN. Changes in the metabolite profiles, mainly quantitative rather than qualitative, were observed in the same cultivar in respect to the treatments, and among the cultivars under the same treatment. Metabolic differences in the stress tolerance of the different genotypes were related to a reduction in the levels of tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle intermediates. The relevant differences, between the most NaCl-tolerant genotype (PAN) and the most sensitive one (EST) were related to the decrease in the threonic acid level. Stress-specific metabolite indicators were also identified: ornithine and asparagine as markers of drought stress and alanine and homoserine as markers of salinity stress.

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