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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Actinorhizal plants have been regarded as promising species in the current climate change
context due to their high tolerance to a multitude of abiotic stresses. While combined salt-heat stress
effects have been studied in crop species, their impact on the model actinorhizal plant, Casuarina
glauca, has not yet been fully addressed. The effect of single salt (400 mM NaCl) and heat (control at
26/22 C, supra optimal temperatures at 35/22 C and 45/22 C day/night) conditions on C. glauca
branchlets was characterised at the physiological level, and stress-induced metabolite changes
were characterised by mass spectrometry-based metabolomics. C. glauca could withstand single
salt and heat conditions. However, the harshest stress condition (400 mM NaCl, 45 C) revealed
photosynthetic impairments due to mesophyll and membrane permeability limitations as well
as major stress-specific differential responses in C and N metabolism. The increased activity of
enzymatic ROS scavengers was, however, revealed to be sufficient to control the plant oxidative
status. Although C. glauca could tolerate single salt and heat stresses, their negative interaction
enhanced the effects of salt stress. Results demonstrated that C. glauca responses to combined
salt-heat stress could be explained as a sum of the responses from each single applied stress
Description
Keywords
actinorhizal plants Casuarina glauca combined stress heat stress metabolomics salt stress
Pedagogical Context
Citation
Jorge, T.F.; Ramalho, J.C.; Alseekh, S.; Pais, I.P.; Leitão, A.E.; Rodrigues, A.P.; Scotti-Campos, P.; Ribeiro-Barros, A.I.; Fernie, A.R.; António, C.Will Casuarina glauca Stress Resilience Be Maintained in the Face of Climate Change? Metabolites 2021, 11, 593
Publisher
MDPI
