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Salicylic acid application modulates physiological and hormonal changes in Eucalyptus globulus under water deficit

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Salicylic acid application modulates physiological and hormonal changes in Eucalyptus globulus under water deficit. / Jesus, Cláudia; Meijon, Monica; Monteiro, Pedro et al.
In: Environmental and Experimental Botany, Vol. 118, 31.10.2015, p. 55-66.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Jesus, C, Meijon, M, Monteiro, P, Correia, B, Amaral, J, Escandón, M, Canal, MJ & Pinto, G 2015, 'Salicylic acid application modulates physiological and hormonal changes in Eucalyptus globulus under water deficit', Environmental and Experimental Botany, vol. 118, pp. 55-66. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envexpbot.2015.06.004

APA

Jesus, C., Meijon, M., Monteiro, P., Correia, B., Amaral, J., Escandón, M., Canal, M. J., & Pinto, G. (2015). Salicylic acid application modulates physiological and hormonal changes in Eucalyptus globulus under water deficit. Environmental and Experimental Botany, 118, 55-66. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envexpbot.2015.06.004

Vancouver

Jesus C, Meijon M, Monteiro P, Correia B, Amaral J, Escandón M et al. Salicylic acid application modulates physiological and hormonal changes in Eucalyptus globulus under water deficit. Environmental and Experimental Botany. 2015 Oct 31;118:55-66. Epub 2015 Jun 18. doi: 10.1016/j.envexpbot.2015.06.004

Author

Jesus, Cláudia ; Meijon, Monica ; Monteiro, Pedro et al. / Salicylic acid application modulates physiological and hormonal changes in Eucalyptus globulus under water deficit. In: Environmental and Experimental Botany. 2015 ; Vol. 118. pp. 55-66.

Bibtex

@article{42ad2adb276f4bf09898f0921d4fac74,
title = "Salicylic acid application modulates physiological and hormonal changes in Eucalyptus globulus under water deficit",
abstract = "Eucalyptus genus is the most widely planted hardwood tree, which productivity and development are limited by low water availability. Plant drought tolerance can be managed by adopting strategies, such as the exogenous application of salicylic acid. The main objective of the present study was to assess whether the exogenous foliar salicylic acid application would ameliorate the damages of water deficit on Eucalyptus globulus plants. Plants were watered at 70% (well water) or 15% (water deficit) of field capacity and four concentrations of salicylic acid (0, 0.75, 2.5 and 5.0 mM) were applied. Water potential, total chlorophylls and carotenoids contents, chlorophyll fluorescence parameters, leaf gas exchange, malondialdehyde, total soluble sugars, starch and total phenols contents were measured. The global hormonal content was quantified by ultra-performance liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry and specific local dynamics of indolacetic acid and abcisic acid were detected by immunolocalization in leaves. A multivariate statistical approach was used to get an overview of the plant physiological status. E. globulus water deficit response included growth rate decline associated with reduced in both water potential and leaf gas exchange parameters. Plant water deficit defence strategies led to an increase in total chlorophylls and carotenoids contents, lipid peroxidation, phenols and total soluble sugars. Six from the 18 hormones detected increased in water deficit plants. Exogenous salicylic acid application improved water deficit tolerance of E. globulus by improving water potential with a positive impact in primary metabolism (photosynthetic rate, soluble sugars) but also in secondary metabolism and defence mechanisms (higher total phenols and less lipid peroxidation) in the highest salicylic acid concentrations. Also, changes in endogenous levels of abscisic and salicylic acids, gibberellins 4 and 7, and specific cytokinins were found in water deficit plants with salicylic acid application. Our results indicated that salicylic acid application could be a potential chemical priming strategy to ameliorate water deficit effects on E. globulus plants.",
keywords = "Water deficit, Plant performance, Phytohormones crosstalk, Priming, Forest trees",
author = "Cl{\'a}udia Jesus and Monica Meijon and Pedro Monteiro and Barbara Correia and Joana Amaral and M{\'o}nica Escand{\'o}n and Canal, {Maria Jesus} and Gl{\'o}ria Pinto",
year = "2015",
month = oct,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1016/j.envexpbot.2015.06.004",
language = "English",
volume = "118",
pages = "55--66",
journal = "Environmental and Experimental Botany",
issn = "0098-8472",
publisher = "PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Salicylic acid application modulates physiological and hormonal changes in Eucalyptus globulus under water deficit

AU - Jesus, Cláudia

AU - Meijon, Monica

AU - Monteiro, Pedro

AU - Correia, Barbara

AU - Amaral, Joana

AU - Escandón, Mónica

AU - Canal, Maria Jesus

AU - Pinto, Glória

PY - 2015/10/31

Y1 - 2015/10/31

N2 - Eucalyptus genus is the most widely planted hardwood tree, which productivity and development are limited by low water availability. Plant drought tolerance can be managed by adopting strategies, such as the exogenous application of salicylic acid. The main objective of the present study was to assess whether the exogenous foliar salicylic acid application would ameliorate the damages of water deficit on Eucalyptus globulus plants. Plants were watered at 70% (well water) or 15% (water deficit) of field capacity and four concentrations of salicylic acid (0, 0.75, 2.5 and 5.0 mM) were applied. Water potential, total chlorophylls and carotenoids contents, chlorophyll fluorescence parameters, leaf gas exchange, malondialdehyde, total soluble sugars, starch and total phenols contents were measured. The global hormonal content was quantified by ultra-performance liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry and specific local dynamics of indolacetic acid and abcisic acid were detected by immunolocalization in leaves. A multivariate statistical approach was used to get an overview of the plant physiological status. E. globulus water deficit response included growth rate decline associated with reduced in both water potential and leaf gas exchange parameters. Plant water deficit defence strategies led to an increase in total chlorophylls and carotenoids contents, lipid peroxidation, phenols and total soluble sugars. Six from the 18 hormones detected increased in water deficit plants. Exogenous salicylic acid application improved water deficit tolerance of E. globulus by improving water potential with a positive impact in primary metabolism (photosynthetic rate, soluble sugars) but also in secondary metabolism and defence mechanisms (higher total phenols and less lipid peroxidation) in the highest salicylic acid concentrations. Also, changes in endogenous levels of abscisic and salicylic acids, gibberellins 4 and 7, and specific cytokinins were found in water deficit plants with salicylic acid application. Our results indicated that salicylic acid application could be a potential chemical priming strategy to ameliorate water deficit effects on E. globulus plants.

AB - Eucalyptus genus is the most widely planted hardwood tree, which productivity and development are limited by low water availability. Plant drought tolerance can be managed by adopting strategies, such as the exogenous application of salicylic acid. The main objective of the present study was to assess whether the exogenous foliar salicylic acid application would ameliorate the damages of water deficit on Eucalyptus globulus plants. Plants were watered at 70% (well water) or 15% (water deficit) of field capacity and four concentrations of salicylic acid (0, 0.75, 2.5 and 5.0 mM) were applied. Water potential, total chlorophylls and carotenoids contents, chlorophyll fluorescence parameters, leaf gas exchange, malondialdehyde, total soluble sugars, starch and total phenols contents were measured. The global hormonal content was quantified by ultra-performance liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry and specific local dynamics of indolacetic acid and abcisic acid were detected by immunolocalization in leaves. A multivariate statistical approach was used to get an overview of the plant physiological status. E. globulus water deficit response included growth rate decline associated with reduced in both water potential and leaf gas exchange parameters. Plant water deficit defence strategies led to an increase in total chlorophylls and carotenoids contents, lipid peroxidation, phenols and total soluble sugars. Six from the 18 hormones detected increased in water deficit plants. Exogenous salicylic acid application improved water deficit tolerance of E. globulus by improving water potential with a positive impact in primary metabolism (photosynthetic rate, soluble sugars) but also in secondary metabolism and defence mechanisms (higher total phenols and less lipid peroxidation) in the highest salicylic acid concentrations. Also, changes in endogenous levels of abscisic and salicylic acids, gibberellins 4 and 7, and specific cytokinins were found in water deficit plants with salicylic acid application. Our results indicated that salicylic acid application could be a potential chemical priming strategy to ameliorate water deficit effects on E. globulus plants.

KW - Water deficit

KW - Plant performance

KW - Phytohormones crosstalk

KW - Priming

KW - Forest trees

U2 - 10.1016/j.envexpbot.2015.06.004

DO - 10.1016/j.envexpbot.2015.06.004

M3 - Journal article

VL - 118

SP - 55

EP - 66

JO - Environmental and Experimental Botany

JF - Environmental and Experimental Botany

SN - 0098-8472

ER -