AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study investigates how exogenous isoprene (20 ppbv) impacts photosynthesis and stress responses in plants that usually emit low levels of isoprene when exposed to varying water availability: optimal, moderate, and severe stress conditions.
  • - Results indicated that plants showed a 30% increase in net photosynthesis and a decrease in harmful reactive oxygen species (HO) during moderate water stress when surrounded by higher isoprene levels, compared to conditions without isoprene.
  • - This suggests that ambient isoprene can provide protective benefits for these low-emitting plants during moderate droughts, likely by reducing oxidative damage that typically hampers photosynthesis.

Article Abstract

Isoprene, the main volatile released by plants, is known to protect the photosynthetic apparatus in isoprene emitters submitted to oxidative pressures caused by environmental constraints. Whether ambient isoprene contributes to protect negligible plant emitters under abiotic stress conditions is less clear, and no study has tested if ambient isoprene is beneficial during drought periods in plant species that naturally release negligible isoprene emissions. This study examines the effect of exogenous isoprene (20 ppbv) on net photosynthesis, stomatal conductance and production of HO (a reactive oxygen species: ROS) in leaves of (a negligible isoprene emitter) submitted to three watering treatments (optimal, moderate water stress and severe water stress). Results showed that exhibited a net photosynthesis increase (+30%) and a relative leaf HO decrease when saplings were exposed to an enriched isoprene atmosphere compared to isoprene-free conditions under moderate water deficit. Such physiological improvement under isoprene exposure was not observed under optimal watering or severe water stress. These findings suggest that when negligible isoprene emitters are surrounded by a very high concentration of isoprene in the ambient air, some plant protection mechanism occurs under moderate water deficit probably related to protection against ROS damage eventually impeding photosynthesis drop.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7076702PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants9020159DOI Listing

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