Argon non-thermal plasma treatment promotes the development of rice (Oryza sativa L.) in saline alkali environments

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Title
Argon non-thermal plasma treatment promotes the development of rice (Oryza sativa L.) in saline alkali environments
Author(s)
K Liu; Y J Feng; J X Guo; G L Wang; L L Shan; S W Gao; Q Liu; H N Sun; X Y Li; X R Sun; J Y Bian; Taeho Kwon
Bibliographic Citation
Protoplasma, vol. 261, no. 5, pp. 927-936
Publication Year
2024
Abstract
Soil salinization leads to a reduction in arable land area, which seriously endangers food security. Developing saline-alkali land has become a key measure to address the contradiction between population growth and limited arable land. Rice is the most important global food crop, feeding half of the world's population and making it a suitable choice for planting on saline-alkali lands. The traditional salt-alkali improvement method has several drawbacks. Currently, non-thermal plasma (NTP) technology is being increasingly applied in agriculture. However, there are few reports on the cultivation of salt/alkali-tolerant rice. Under alkaline stress, argon NTP treatment significantly increased the germination rate of Longdao 5 (LD5) rice seeds. In addition, at 15 kV and 120 s, NTP treatment significantly increased the activity of antioxidant enzymes such as catalase and SOD. NTP treatment induced changes in genes related to salt-alkali stress in rice seedlings, such as chitinase and xylanase inhibitor proteins, which increased the tolerance of the seeds to salt-alkali stress. This experiment has expanded the application scope of NTP in agriculture, providing a more cost-effective, less harmful, and faster method for developing salt-alkali-tolerant rice and laying a theoretical foundation for cultivating NTP-enhanced salt-alkali-tolerant rice.
Keyword
Soil salinizationNon-thermal plasmaRiceSalineAlkalineAlkali stress
ISSN
0033-183X
Publisher
Springer
Full Text Link
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00709-024-01946-x
Type
Article
Appears in Collections:
Jeonbuk Branch Institute > Primate Resources Center > 1. Journal Articles
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