Hydrogen sulfide is required for salicylic acid-induced chilling tolerance of cucumber seedlings.

Protoplasma

State Key Laboratory of Crop Biology; Key Laboratory of Crop Biology and Genetic Improvement of Horticultural Crops in Huang huai Region; College of Horticulture Science and Engineering, Shandong Agricultural University, Tai'an, 271018, Shandong, China.

Published: November 2020

Salicylic acid (SA) and hydrogen sulfide (HS) have been proved to be multifunctional signal molecules to participate in the response of plants to abiotic stresses. However, it is still unclear whether there is interaction between SA and HS in response to chilling intensity of cucumber seedlings. Here, we found SA was sensitive to chilling intensity. Under normal condition, NaHS (HS donor) or removing endogenous HS with hypotaurine (HT, a specific scavenger of HS) and DL-propargylglycine (PAG, a specific inhibitor of HS) has no effect on endogenous SA level; however, SA induced endogenous HS content and activated the activities and mRNA level of L-/D-cysteine desulfhydrase (L-/D-CD), and inhibiting endogenous SA with paclobutrazol (PAC) or 2-aminoindan-2-phosphonic acid (AIP) blocked this effect, implying HS may play a role after SA signal. Further studies showed that both SA and NaHS notably alleviated chilling injury, which was evidenced by lower electrolyte leakage (EL), MDA content, and ROS accumulation, compared with HO treatment. Of note, SA and HS improved the activities and mRNA level of antioxidant enzymes (SOD, POD, CAT, APX, and GR) as well as the contents of AsA and GSH. Additionally, the chilling-response genes (ICE, CBF1, and COR) were obviously upregulated by exogenous SA and NaHS. However, the positive effect of SA on chilling tolerance was inhibited by HT, whereas PAC or AIP did not affect NaHS-induced chilling tolerance. Taken together, the data reveals that HS acts as a downstream signal of SA-induced chilling tolerance of cucumber via modulating antioxidant system and chilling-response genes.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00709-020-01531-yDOI Listing

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