The Influence of Spirulina platensis on Physiological Characterization and Mitigation of DNA Damage in Salt-stressed Phaseolus vulgaris L. Plants | ||||
Egyptian Journal of Botany | ||||
Article 20, Volume 63, Issue 2, May 2023, Page 607-620 PDF (2.84 MB) | ||||
Document Type: Regular issue (Original Article) | ||||
DOI: 10.21608/ejbo.2023.168006.2165 | ||||
View on SCiNiTO | ||||
Authors | ||||
Mohamed A. Taha1; Helal R. Moussa 2; Eldessoky S. Dessoky2, 3 | ||||
1Department of Horticulture, Faculty of Agriculture, Menoufia University, Menoufia, Egypt | ||||
2Radioisotope Department, Nuclear Research Center, Atomic Energy Authority, Giza, Egypt | ||||
3Department of Biology, Faculty of Science, Taif University, Taif, Saudi Arabia | ||||
Abstract | ||||
Salinity severely reduced crop productivity. In this work, the effectiveness of Spirulina platensis (100 mg/l) as a foliar growth stimulator was tested for its ability to reduce the harmful effect of salinity on Phaseolus vulgaris L. plants. The experiment was divided into four groups as follows: G1 (control), G2 (200 mM NaCl), G3 (100 mg/l of Spirulina platensis), and G4 (200 mM NaCl + 100 mg/l of Spirulina platensis). The results declared that shoot weight, plant height, leaves number, during the vegetative growth stage, pods number/plant, seed number/pod, pods weight during fruiting stage, as well as content of carotenoids, chlorophyll a+b, 100-seed weights, photosynthetic activity (assimilation of 14CO2), and total protein content reduced considerablyin salt-stressed Phaseolus vulgaris. When compared to salt-stressed plants, the above metrics were enhanced by G4. In comparison to the control, the presence of salinity increased the activities of catalase (CAT), superoxide dismutase (SOD), glutathione peroxidase (GPX), peroxidase activity (POD), malondialdehyde (MDA), free proline, transpiration rate, and total phenol. Additionally, compared to plants under salt stress, G4 application (200 mM NaCl + 100 mg/l of Spirulina platensis) decreased the aforementioned metrics. Treatments of Phaseolus vulgaris with 200 mM NaCl + 100 mg/l of Spirulina platensis considerably increased the macronutrient content and decreased the Na+ and Cl− levels as compared to G2. Obtained results proved that foliar applications of S. platensis at 100 mg/l have a high potential for improving growth, photosynthetic capacity, yield production, decreased ROS-induced oxidative damage, and reducing DNA damage in salt-stressed Phaseolus vulgaris. | ||||
Keywords | ||||
Cyanobacteria; Macronutrient content; Photosynthetic efficiency (14CO2 fixation); S. platensis; Transpiration rate | ||||
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