UV-B radiation impacts shoot tissue pigment composition in allium fistulosum L. cultigens

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Abstract

Plants from the Allium genus are valued worldwide for culinary flavor and medicinal attributes. In this study, 16 cultigens of bunching onion (Allium fistulosum L.) were grown in a glasshouse under filtered UV radiation (control) or supplemental UV-B radiation [7.0 mol·m-2·s -2 (2.68 W·m-2)] to determine impacts on growth, physiological parameters, and nutritional quality. Supplemental UV-B radiation influenced shoot tissue carotenoid concentrations in some, but not all, of the bunching onions. Xanthophyll carotenoid pigments lutein and β-carotene and chlorophylls a and b in shoot tissues differed between UV-B radiation treatments and among cultigens. Cultigen "Pesoenyj" responded to supplemental UV-B radiation with increases in the ratio of zeaxanthin + antheraxanthin to zeaxanthin + antheraxanthin + violaxanthin, which may indicate a flux in the xanthophyll carotenoids towards deepoxydation, commonly found under high irradiance stress. Increases in carotenoid concentrations would be expected to increase crop nutritional values. © 2013 Kristin R. Abney et al.

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Abney, K. R., Kopsell, D. A., Sams, C. E., Zivanovic, S., & Kopsell, D. E. (2013). UV-B radiation impacts shoot tissue pigment composition in allium fistulosum L. cultigens. The Scientific World Journal, 2013. https://doi.org/10.1155/2013/513867

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