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Chitosan Mitigated the Adverse Effect of Cd by Regulating Antioxidant Activities, Hormones, and Organic Acids Contents in Pepper ( Capsicum Annum L.)

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Date

2024

Authors

Ekinci, Melek
Shams, Mostafakamal
Turan, Metin
Ucar, Sumeyra
Yaprak, Esra
Yuksel, Esra Arslan
Yildirim, Ertan

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Cell Press

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Abstract

Chitosan (CTS) is one of the natural healers' alternatives to chemical products within the scope of good agricultural practices. It can be used in the improvement of agriculture (prevention of toxic metal uptake by plants) due to its chelating feature of metal ions. This study aims to investigate the effectiveness of chitosan in eliminating the negative effects of cadmium (Cd) stress on pepper (Capsicum annum L.). The results showed that Cd stress significantly decreased plant growth, chlorophyll content, and leaf water relative content, followed by an increase in proline, antioxidant enzyme activities, and abscisic acid (ABA) content. According to the results, Cd treatment (200 mg kg-1) significantly increased the aspartate, glutamate, asparagine, histidine, and phenylalanine content, while it significantly decreased the content of endogenous hormones such as gibberellic acid (GA), indole-3-acetic acid (IAA), and salicylic acid (SA). However, CTS application decreased the uptake of Cd and caused a decrease in hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), abscisic acid (ABA), and melondialdehyde (MDA) content, as well as an increase in plant performance, and GA, IAA, and SA content in the plants grown under Cd pollution compared to the ones treated with Cd and without CTS. This study suggests that CTS application helps pepper seedlings tolerate Cd stress through a decrease in Cd uptake, and an increase in amino acids and hormone content.

Description

Ekinci, Melek/0000-0002-7604-3803; Sha, Mostafakamal/0000-0001-6678-5961;

Keywords

Pepper, Plant Growth, Heavy Metal, Stress, Chelating Effect

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Q1

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Q1

Source

Heliyon

Volume

10

Issue

17

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