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Zinc Seed Priming Alleviates Salinity Stress and Enhances Sorghum Growth by Regulating Antioxidant Activities, Nutrient Homeostasis, and Osmolyte Synthesis

Research Authors
Muhammad Umair Hassan , Muhammad Umer Chattha , Imran Khan2 , Tahir Abbas Khan , Mohsin Nawaz , Haiying Tang , Mehmood Ali Noor , Tahani A. Y. Asseri , Mohamed Hashem and Huang Guoqin
Research Abstract

Salinity is a serious abiotic stress that limits crop production and food security. Micronutrient
application has shown promising results in mitigating the toxic impacts of salinity. This study
assessed the impacts of zinc seed priming (ZSP) on the germination, growth, physiological and
biochemical functioning of sorghum cultivars. The study comprised sorghum cultivars (JS-2002 and
JS-263), salinity stress (control (0 mM) and 120 mM)), and control and ZSP (4 mM). Salinity stress
reduced germination and seedling growth by increasing electrolyte leakage (EL: 60.65%), hydrogen
peroxide (H2O2: 109.50%), malondialdehyde (MDA; 115.30%), sodium (Na), and chloride (Cl) accumulation
and decreasing chlorophyll synthesis, relative water contents (RWC), total soluble proteins
(TSPs), and potassium (K) uptake and accumulation. Nonetheless, ZSP mitigated the deleterious
impacts of salinity and led to faster germination and better seedling growth. Zinc seed priming
improved the chlorophyll synthesis, leaf water contents, antioxidant activities (ascorbate peroxide:
APX, catalase: CAT, peroxidase: POD, superoxide dismutase: SOD), TSPs, proline, K uptake and
accumulation, and reduced EL, MDA, and H2O2 production, as well as the accumulation of toxic
ions (Na and Cl), thereby promoting better germination and growth. Thus, these findings suggested
that ZSP can mitigate the toxicity of salinity by favoring nutrient homeostasis, antioxidant activities,
chlorophyll synthesis, osmolyte accumulation, and maintaining leaf water status

Research Date
Research Journal
Agronomy
Research Publisher
MDPI
Research Rank
Q1
Research Vol
14
Research Website
14
Research Year
2024
Research Pages
1815- 1831