AI Article Synopsis

  • Environmental extremes like high salt levels threaten agriculture, prompting research on using halophilic microbes to help plants cope with salt stress.
  • The study evaluated the impacts of these microbes on sunflower crops under salt stress, focusing on factors like photosystem activity and nitrogen assimilation.
  • Results showed that microbial treatment improved plant performance by enhancing chlorophyll efficiency, nitrogen availability, and overall resilience against salt stress.

Article Abstract

Environmental extremes such as hypersaline conditions are significant threats to agricultural productivity. The sustainable use of halophilic microbial strains was evaluated in plant in a salt stress environment. Oxygen-evolving complex (OEC), energy compartmentalization, harvesting efficiencies (LHE), specific energy fluxes (SEF), and nitrogen assimilation of oilseed crops (Sunflower cultivars) in a suboptimal environment was examined. Plants were grown in a plastic pot (15 ×18 cm) containing sterilized (autoclaved at 120°C for 1 h) soil. Twenty-five ml suspension (10 CFU/ml) each of strain and (accession number NR 074540.1) and strain (accession number MW362506), were applied drenching method. Month-old plants were subjected to salt stress gradual increment method. The energy compartmentalization of microbial inoculated plants exposed to salt stress revealed higher photosystem II (PSII) activity at the donor side, lesser photo-inhibition, and increased performance of oxygen-evolving complex compared to control. High potassium (K) and low sodium (Na) ions in treated leaves with the activated barricade of the antioxidant system stimulated by strains favored enhanced photochemical efficiency, smooth electron transport, and lesser energy dissipation in the stressed plants. Moreover, the results reveal the increased activity of nitrite reductase (NiR) and nitrate reductase (NR) by microbial inoculation that elevated the nitrogen availability in the salt-stressed plant. The current research concludes that the application of bio-inoculants that reside in the hyper-saline environment offers substantial potential to enhance salt tolerance in sunflowers by modulating their water uptake, chlorophyll, nitrogen metabolism, and better photochemical yield.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9340225PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2022.913825DOI Listing

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