AI Article Synopsis

  • Abiotic stressors, particularly salt, significantly hinder plant growth, with maize being especially susceptible, leading to reduced productivity and potential crop loss.
  • The study focused on using the endophytic fungal microbe BK isolate to enhance maize growth under severe salinity stress, showing that salt negatively affects key growth indicators while BK inoculation helps restore them to optimal levels.
  • Results indicated that BK inoculation improved salt tolerance in maize by balancing ion and mineral ratios, leading to better overall plant health compared to non-inoculated plants under salt stress.

Article Abstract

Abiotic stressors are global limiting constraints for plant growth and development. The most severe abiotic factor for plant growth suppression is salt. Among many field crops, maize is more vulnerable to salt, which inhibits the growth and development of plants and results in low productivity or even crop loss under extreme salinity. Consequently, comprehending the effects of salt stress on maize crop improvement, while retaining high productivity and applying mitigation strategies, is essential for achieving the long-term objective of sustainable food security. This study aimed to exploit the endophytic fungal microbe; BK isolate for the growth promotion of maize under severe salinity stress. Current findings showed that salt stress (200 mM) negatively affected chlorophyll a and b, total chlorophyll, and endogenous IAA, with enhanced values of chlorophyll a/b ratio, carotenoids, total protein, total sugars, total lipids, secondary metabolites (phenol, flavonoids, tannins), antioxidant enzyme activity (catalase, ascorbate peroxidase), proline content, and lipid peroxidation in maize plants. However, BK inoculation reversed the negative impact of salt stress by rebalancing the chlorophyll a/b ratio, carotenoids, total protein, total sugars, total lipids, secondary metabolites (phenol, flavonoids, tannins), antioxidant enzyme activity (catalase, ascorbate peroxidase), and proline content to optimal levels suitable for growth promotion and ameliorating salt stress in maize plants. Furthermore, maize plants inoculated with BK under salt stress had lower Na, Cl concentrations, lower NaK and Na/Ca ratios, and higher N, P, Ca, K, and Mg content than non-inoculated plants. The BK isolate improved the salt tolerance by modulating physiochemical attributes, and the root-to-shoot translocation of ions and mineral elements, thereby rebalancing the Na/K, Na/Ca ratio of maize plants under salt stress.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10145286PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants12081703DOI Listing

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