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The Biostimulant, Potassium Humate Ameliorates Abiotic Stress in by Increasing Starch Availability. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Potassium humate is a biostimulant that enhances plant growth and stress tolerance, but its molecular actions are not fully understood.
  • A study on Arabidopsis showed that potassium humate increases plant weight and reduces antioxidant responses while maintaining photosynthesis during salt and osmotic stress.
  • The findings suggest that potassium humate modifies starch levels in plants, helping them cope with environmental stress without increasing potassium accumulation.

Article Abstract

Potassium humate is a widely used biostimulant known for its ability to enhance growth and improve tolerance to abiotic stress. However, the molecular mechanisms explaining its effects remain poorly understood. In this study, we investigated the mechanism of action of potassium humate using the model plant . We demonstrated that a formulation of potassium humate effectively increased the fresh weight accumulation of Arabidopsis plants under normal conditions, salt stress (sodium or lithium chloride), and particularly under osmotic stress (mannitol). Interestingly, plants treated with potassium humate exhibited a reduced antioxidant response and lower proline accumulation, while maintaining photosynthetic activity under stress conditions. The observed sodium and osmotic tolerance induced by humate was not accompanied by increased potassium accumulation. Additionally, metabolomic analysis revealed that potassium humate increased maltose levels under control conditions but decreased levels of fructose. However, under stress, both maltose and glucose levels decreased, suggesting changes in starch utilization and an increase in glycolysis. Starch concentration measurements in leaves showed that plants treated with potassium humate accumulated less starch under control conditions, while under stress, they accumulated starch to levels similar to or higher than control plants. Taken together, our findings suggest that the molecular mechanism underlying the abiotic stress tolerance conferred by potassium humate involves its ability to alter starch content under normal growth conditions and under salt or osmotic stress.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10418871PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms241512140DOI Listing

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