Non-enzymatic antioxidative defence in drought-stressed mulberry (Morus indica L.) genotypes
Non-enzymatic antioxidative defence in drought-stressed mulberry (Morus indica L.) genotypes
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Date
2012-06-01
Authors
Guha, Anirban
Sengupta, Debashree
Rasineni, Girish Kumar
Reddy, Attipalli Ramachandra
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Abstract
The present study investigated drought-induced responses of non-enzymatic antioxidants in four diverse mulberry genotypes (Morus indica L. S-36, M-5, MR-2 and V-1). Inside the glasshouse, potted plants were subjected to four water regimes for 75 days: (a) control: pots maintained at 100% pot water holding capacity (PC) (b) low water stress: 75% PC (c) medium water stress: 50% PC and (d) high water stress: 25% PC. Photosynthetic leaf gas exchange and non-enzymatic antioxidants including α-tocopherol, ascorbic acid (AA), glutathione, proline and total carotenoids were measured in leaves at regular intervals. Amongst all, V-1 was relatively drought tolerant and showed exceeded accumulation of α-tocopherol and AA-glutathione pool in association with higher carotenoids and proline contents. Susceptible S-36, M-5 and MR-2 could not induce any significant up-regulation in AA-glutathione pool leading to endogenous loss of α-tocopherol and more lipid peroxidation. Reactive oxygen species (ROS) like hydrogen peroxide (H 2O 2) and superoxide (O 2·-) showed apparent accumulation in water-stressed leaves and significantly contributed to lipid peroxidation in susceptible genotypes when compared to V-1. Our study demonstrated that proline, AA and glutathione were the major non-enzymatic antioxidants in mulberry with α-tocopherol and carotenoids as good additional indicators for drought stress tolerance. These non-enzymatic antioxidants can cumulatively render effective protection against oxidative damage and can be considered as reliable markers for screening drought-tolerant mulberry genotypes. © 2011 Springer-Verlag.
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Keywords
Drought tolerance,
Lipid peroxidation,
Mulberry (Morus indica L.),
Non-enzymatic antioxidants,
Photosynthesis,
Reactive oxygen species (ROS)
Citation
Trees - Structure and Function. v.26(3)