Neotyphodium endophyte strain and superoxide dismutase activity in perennial ryegrass plants under water deficit |
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Authors: | Lyn Briggs Jim Crush Lily Ouyang Jan Sprosen |
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Affiliation: | 1. AgResearch Ltd., Ruakura Research Centre, PB 3115, Hamilton, 3240, New Zealand
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Abstract: | The presence of Neotyphodium endophyte in forage grass tillers has been associated with increased tolerance of abiotic stresses. The effect of four endophyte treatments (plants with three different strains of Neotyphodium lolii compared with plants without endophyte) on superoxide dismutase (SOD) (EC1.15.1.1) activity in Lolium perenne cv ‘Grasslands Samson’ was measured under high and low dehydration regimes in a glasshouse experiment. SOD activity was assayed by a microplate method utilising the inhibition of reduction of a tetrazolium dye by superoxide radicals. A progressive increase in dehydration over 2 weeks reduced shoot fresh weight, dry weight and shoot water content for high, compared with low, moisture-stressed plants. Mean shoot fresh weight was significantly lower for plants with strain AR37 endophyte than for plants with strain AR1 endophyte, wild-type or endophyte-free plants, but there was no interaction between endophyte treatment and dehydration treatment. There were no differences in mean SOD activity between the dehydration treatments, and the four endophyte treatments at any of the harvests. All harvest mean SOD levels for plants in both stress groups, however, were significantly different from the preceding harvest value. Between the first and second week of moisture stress there was a significant endophyte by harvest interaction for mean percentage change in SOD activity when activity in plants with wild-type strain endophyte increased more rapidly than in AR1, AR37 or endophyte-free plants. The results are in agreement with earlier reports suggesting that Neotyphodium endophytes do not have major effects on the water stress physiology of perennial ryegrass, although water deficits applied were not extreme. |
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