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Chemical Derivatization of Metabolite Mass Profiling of the Recretohalophyte Aeluropus lagopoides Revealing Salt Stress Tolerance Mechanism
Authors:Murali Krishna Paidi  Parinita Agarwal  Prashant More  Pradeep K. Agarwal
Affiliation:1.Plant Omics Division,CSIR-Central Salt and Marine Chemicals Research Institute (CSIR-CSMCRI), Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR),Bhavnagar,India;2.Academy of Scientific and Innovative Research,CSIR-Central Salt and Marine Chemicals Research Institute (CSIR-CSMCRI), Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR),Bhavnagar,India
Abstract:Plants are the primary producers of food for human being. Their intracellular environment alternation is influenced by abiotic stress factors such as drought, heat and soil salinity. Aeluropus lagopoides is a strong halophyte that grows with ease under high saline muddy banks of creeks of Gujarat, India. To study the response of salinity on metabolite changes in Aeluropus, three treatments, i.e. control, salinity and recovery, were selected for both shoot and root tissue. The cytosolic metabolite state was analysed by molecular chemical derivatization gas chromatography mass profiling. During saline treatment, significant increase of compatible solutes in shoot and root tissue was observed as compared to control. Subsequently, metabolic concentration decreased under recovery conditions. The metabolites like amino acids, organic acids and polyols were significantly detected in both shoot and root of Aeluropus under salinity. The metabolites like proline, aspartic acid, glycine, succinic acid and glycolic acid were significantly upregulated under stress. The salicylic acid was found to play a role in maintaining the polyols level by its down-regulation during salinity. The principle component analysis of all detected metabolites in both shoot and root showed that metabolites expressed under salinity (component 1) were highly variable, while metabolites expressed under recovery (component 2) were comparatively less variable as compared to control. The evolved intracellular compartmentalization of amino acids, organic acids and polyols in A. lagopoides can be a hallmark to sustaining at high salinity stress.
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