Coumarin improves tomato plant tolerance to salinity by enhancing antioxidant defence, glyoxalase system and ion homeostasis
Khursheda Parvin, Mirza Hasanuzzaman, Sayed Mohammad Mohsin, Kamrun Nahar, Masayuki Fujita
Abstract
Abstract Salinity is a severe threat to crop growth, development and even to world food sustainability. Plant possess natural antioxidant defense tactics to mitigate salinity‐induced oxidative stress. Phenolic compounds are non‐enzymatic antioxidants with specific roles in protecting plant cells against stress‐mediated reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation. Coumarin (COU) is one of these compounds, however, to date, little is known about antioxidative roles of exogenous COU in enhancing plant tolerance mechanisms under salt stress. The involvement of COU in increasing tomato salt tolerance was examined in the present study using COU as a pre‐treatment at 20 or 30 µM for 2 days against salt stress (100 or 160 NaCl; 5 days). The COU‐mediated stimulation of plant antioxidant defence and glyoxalase systems to suppress salt‐induced ROS and methylglyoxal (MG) toxicity, respectively, were the main hypotheses examined in the present study. Addition of COU suppressed salt‐induced excess accumulation of ROS and MG, and significantly reduced membrane damage, lipid peroxidation and Na + toxicity. These results demonstrate COU‐improved plant growth, biomass content, photosynthetic pigment content, water retention and mineral homeostasis upon imposition of salinity. Finally, this present study suggests that COU has potential roles as a phytoprotectant in stimulating plant antioxidative mechanisms and improving glyoxalase enzyme activity under salinity stress.