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Pathogens


Title:An Endophytic Fungi-Based Biostimulant Modulates Volatile and Non-Volatile Secondary Metabolites and Yield of Greenhouse Basil (Ocimum basilicum L.) through Variable Mechanisms Dependent on Salinity Stress Level
Author(s):Saia S; Corrado G; Vitaglione P; Colla G; Bonini P; Giordano M; Stasio ED; Raimondi G; Sacchi R; Rouphael Y;
Address:"Department Veterinary Sciences, University of Pisa, via delle Piagge 2, 56129 Pisa, Italy. Department of Agricultural Sciences, University of Naples Federico II, 80055 Naples, Italy. Department of Agriculture and Forest Sciences, University of Tuscia, 01100 Viterbo, Italy. NGAlab, La Riera de Gaia, 43762 Tarragona, Spain"
Journal Title:Pathogens
Year:2021
Volume:20210623
Issue:7
Page Number: -
DOI: 10.3390/pathogens10070797
ISSN/ISBN:2076-0817 (Print) 2076-0817 (Electronic) 2076-0817 (Linking)
Abstract:"Salinity in water and soil is one of the major environmental factors limiting the productivity of agronomic and horticultural crops. In basil (Ocimum basilicum L., Lamiaceae) and other Ocimum species, information on the plant response to mild salinity levels, often induced by the irrigation or fertigation systems, is scarce. In the present work, we tested the effectiveness of a microbial-based biostimulant containing two strains of arbuscular mycorrhiza fungi (AMF) and Trichoderma koningii in sustaining greenhouse basil yield traits, subjected to two mild salinity stresses (25 mM [low] and 50 mM [high] modulated by augmenting the fertigation osmotic potential with NaCl) compared to a non-stressed control. The impact of salinity stress was further appraised in terms of plant physiology, morphological ontogenesis and composition in polyphenols and volatile organic compounds (VOC). As expected, increasing the salinity of the solution strongly depressed the plant yield, nutrient uptake and concentration, reduced photosynthetic activity and leaf water potential, increased the Na and Cl and induced the accumulation of polyphenols. In addition, it decreased the concentration of Eucalyptol and beta-Linalool, two of its main essential oil constituents. Irrespective of the salinity stress level, the multispecies inoculum strongly benefited plant growth, leaf number and area, and the accumulation of Ca, Mg, B, p-coumaric and chicoric acids, while it reduced nitrate and Cl concentrations in the shoots and affected the concentration of some minor VOC constituents. The benefits derived from the inoculum in term of yield and quality harnessed different mechanisms depending on the degree of stress. under low-stress conditions, the inoculum directly stimulated the photosynthetic activity after an increase of the Fe and Mn availability for the plants and induced the accumulation of caffeic and rosmarinic acids. under high stress conditions, the inoculum mostly acted directly on the sequestration of Na and the increase of P availability for the plant, moreover it stimulated the accumulation of polyphenols, especially of ferulic and chicoric acids and quercetin-rutinoside in the shoots. Notably, the inoculum did not affect the VOC composition, thus suggesting that its activity did not interact with the essential oil biosynthesis. These results clearly indicate that beneficial inocula constitute a valuable tool for sustaining yield and improving or sustaining quality under suboptimal water quality conditions imposing low salinity stress on horticultural crops"
Keywords:Funneliformis mosseae Rhizoglomus irregular Trichoderma koningii medicinal and aromatic plants polyphenols volatile organic compounds;
Notes:"PubMed-not-MEDLINESaia, Sergio Corrado, Giandomenico Vitaglione, Paola Colla, Giuseppe Bonini, Paolo Giordano, Maria Stasio, Emilio Di Raimondi, Giampaolo Sacchi, Raffaele Rouphael, Youssef eng Switzerland 2021/07/03 Pathogens. 2021 Jun 23; 10(7):797. doi: 10.3390/pathogens10070797"

 
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