1 / 30

Effect of salinity stress on watermelon [ Citrullus lanatus (Thunb . ) Matsum & Nakai]

Effect of salinity stress on watermelon [ Citrullus lanatus (Thunb . ) Matsum & Nakai]. SUPERVISOR: STUDENT : Professor Maja Pavela-Vrančič Ivana Bogić TUTOR: Professor Gabriella Stefania Scippa . The aim :

palmore
Download Presentation

Effect of salinity stress on watermelon [ Citrullus lanatus (Thunb . ) Matsum & Nakai]

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Effect of salinity stress on watermelon [Citrulluslanatus (Thunb.) Matsum & Nakai] SUPERVISOR: STUDENT: Professor Maja Pavela-VrančičIvana Bogić TUTOR: Professor Gabriella Stefania Scippa

  2. The aim: • effects of salt stress onsuperoxide dismutase activity in watermelonsgraftedonto different rootstocks

  3. Watermelon • herbaceous plant • glycophile species • tolerate small amounts of salt • low salinity • increases the yield • high salinity • damage

  4. Watermelon cultivation - Croatia • River Neretva valley • watermelon - one of the most important crops • increment of soil salinity, result of : • seawater intrusion • construction of the hydroelectric dams • agricultural activities • land developmental activities • Growers demand: • higher yield • better quality

  5. Grafting • Improve: • fruit shape • skin colour • skin or rind smoothness • flex texture and colour • rind thickness • yield • degree of environmental effectstolerance (salt stress...) • Rootstock selection according to: • suitability for growing season • cultivation methods • soil environment • type of crops and cultivars • salt resistance

  6. Shoot: • salt sensitive • Cl- and Na+ ions damage • Root • exclusion • controled absorption • Grafted plants: • growth and reproduction altered • increase salinity resistance - salt tolerant rootstock

  7. Watermelons cultivation: • Institute for Adriatic Crops and Karst Reclamation, Split • glass greenhouse = controled conditions • from May to July 2004

  8. The watermelons were grafted: • 4 combinations of scion and rootstock • scion: Fantasy • rootstocks: Fantasy, Strong Tosa, Emphasis and the S1

  9. Grafted plants: • 28 days irrigated with standard nutrient solution • 2 weeks irrigated with saline solution: sea salt + standard nutrient solution • 3 saline solution treatments: • electrical conductivity (EC) 2dS m-1 4 dS m-1 6 dS m-1 • different levels of salt stress

  10. Salt stress • Disrupts: • homeostasis in ion distribution • water potential • plant growth • productivity • Mechanism of salt tolerance include: • efficient uptake selectivityof ions by roots and transport into the leaves • compartmentalization of ions • synthesis of compatible solutes • induction of plant hormones • induction of antioxidative enzymes • Salt ion exclusion by roots: • variable ability • influence on accumulation of salt ions in scions • Salt ion accumulation in scions: • controlled by the genotype of the rootstock • leads to salt stress oxidative stress

  11. Oxidative stress • imbalance between the oxidant and the antioxidant activity • salt stress  excess of absorbed light energy • absorbed energy +O2reactive oxygen species • reactive oxygen species: • O2·¯ superoxide radical • H2O2 hydrogen peroxide • OH. hydroxyl radical • 1O2singlet oxygen • unspecifically react with different molecules • scavengered by antioxidant enzymes • superoxide dismutase (SOD)

  12. Plant material (leaves): • sampled 2 weeks after salinisation started • stored at -80 oC • used for superoxide dismutase activity assay

  13. Plant material (leaves): • homogenized in protein extraction buffer • homogenate is centrifuged • supernatant = enzyme extract • stored at -20 oC • used for: • assay of enzyme activity • protein determination • Enzyme extract: • the day after: thawed, centrifuged • diluted enzyme solution corresponds to • 2.5μl • 5.0 μl • 7.5 μl • 10.0 μl of the original enzyme extract

  14. Superoxide dismutase activity assay • Reaction mixture: • prepared • 50 mM phosphate buffer, pH 7.8 • 13 mM methionine • 75 μM nitroblue tetrazolium (NBT) • 0.1 mM EDTA • 2 μM riboflavin • 0.1 ml of: • enzyme solution – for reaction • protein extraction buffer – for control • shaken • placed in a light box • Reaction: • turning-on the light • 10 min • light was turned-off • test tubes were covered with a black cloth

  15. Control reaction – without SOD • NBT is reduced by O2·¯ into the water-insoluble blue colouredformazan that exhibits an absorbance maximum at λmax=560 nm: O2·¯ + nitroblue tetrazolium+ O2 + nitroblue tetrazolium. 2 nitroblue tetrazolium.nitroblue tetrazolium+ + formazan • intensity of the blue colour absorbance of the reaction mixture at 560 nm (Lambda Bio 40 UV-Vis spectrophotometer) • Control reaction = highest blue colour intensity

  16. Reaction with SOD: • inhibits reduction of NBT • catalyzes dismutation of two superoxide radicals into hydrogen peroxide and molecular oxygen: SODox + O2·¯ + H+SODred(H+) + O2 SODred(H+) + O2·¯ + H+SODox+ H2O2 • Reaction mixture: increasing volume of the enzyme extract decreased blue colour intensity

  17. % of inhibition = (sample A560 – control A560) / control A560 Ve= volume of enzyme at 50% of inhibition estimated graphically Calculation

  18. Specific activity of SOD: expressed in unit per mg protein: SOD (U mg-1) = Ve x c c= protein concentration measured according to Bradford One unit of SOD activity: amount of enzyme required to cause 50% inhibition of the rate of nitroblue tetrazolium reduction

  19. 4 grafted watermelon cultivars showed anincreaseinsuperoxide dismutase activity, after a two week exposure to salinity stress The mean value of SOD activity in watermelon grafted plants

  20. SOD activity in leaves of salt-stressed watermelons grafted onto four different rootstocks

  21. variation between different rootstocks in SOD activity following treatment with the control, 2 dS m-1EC solution • difference in salt ion accumulation in the shoot

  22. Fantasy • non-grafted control • SOD activity increased • EC value of the saline solutionincreased

  23. S1 grafted plants • SOD activity increased • EC value of the saline solution increased • 6 dS m-1 EC treatment 2Xcontrol

  24. S1 grafted plants • significant morphological damage • first died • exclusion by the root insufficient • large amounts of salt reach the leaves, accumulate and cause oxidative stress

  25. Emphasisgrafted plants • SOD activity increased • Emphasis grafted root -very good ion excluder

  26. Strong Tosa grafted plants • SOD activity increased • last showed visible morphologycal damage • Strong Tosa root -very good ion-excluder

  27. effect of salinity: • complex process • dependins on: • salt concentration • plant genotype • growth stage • environmental conditions • genotype of the rootstock • salt stress: • causes oxidative stress • increases SOD activity

  28. Conclusion • SOD activity increases under increased salinity • Response to salt stress - depends on the rootstock genotype • Rootstock: • preventstoxic effects induced by salinity • differentiatesaline ion accumulation in the scion

  29. Grafting: • valid strategy • amelioration of shoot growth under salinity • farmers - Neretva valley • which rootstock - better fruit yield and quality • how improve growth and development under high salt concentrations • more studiesto select rootstock adapted for growth under saline conditions

  30. Thank You! ivana.bogic@st.htnet.hr

More Related