Biochemical changes and SDS-PAGE analyses of chickpea (cicer arietinum L.) genotypes in response to salinity during the early stages of seedling growth

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Date

2014-07-04

Authors

Arefian, Mohammad
Vessal, Saeedreza
Bagheri, Abdolreza

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Uludağ Üniversitesi

Abstract

Salinity is one of the most serious abiotic stresses for plants, causing other subsequent consequences such as oxidative stress, which eventually leads to cell death. Measured various biochemical parameters in chickpea genotypes were performed under various NaCl concentrations (0, 8 and 12 dS.m-1 ( in controlled condition at 21 and 28-day after sowing (DAS). After determination of tolerant (MCC544) and susceptible (MCC806) genotypes and also the best differential salt concentration, SDS-PAGE was used to compare protein profiling in these two genotypes in 3 time points with four replicates. Proline and protein contents were significantly higher in MCC544 as much as 27 fold (for proline) and 30% (for protein) increase over control in 28 DAS at 12 dS.m-1 of salt. The leaf soluble carbohydrates increased significantly in MCC544 and MCC760, compared with others. The minimum decline of electrolyte leakages (6%) and malondialdehyde (MDA) content was belonged to MCC760 while MCC806 genotype showed the highest decrease rate (more than 20%). Total leaf chlorophyll content decreased in all genotypes. More strong and positive correlations between parameters was recorded in tolerant genotypes which resulted in membrane and osmotic balance. Analyses of SDS-PAGE revealed that more rapid accumulation and/or less degradation of proteins occurred in higher molecular weight proteins. Moreover, the response of genotypes through protein changes before 96 h stress might be a possible reason for salinity tolerance in this condition.

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Keywords

Chickpea, Proline, Protein, SDS-PAGE, Salinity

Citation

Arefian, M. vd. (2014). "Biochemical changes and SDS-PAGE analyses of chickpea (cicer arietinum L.) genotypes in response to salinity during the early stages of seedling growth". Journal of Biological and Environmental Sciences, 8(23), 99-109.