Salinity is one of the most common factors limiting the productivity of crops. The damaging effect of salt stress on many vital plant processes is mediated, on the one hand, by the osmotic stress caused by large concentrations of Na+ and Cl− outside the root and, on the other hand, by the toxic effect of these ions loaded in the cell. In our work, the influence of salinity on the changes in photosynthesis, transpiration, water content and cytosolic pH in the leaves of two important crops of the Solanaceae family—tobacco and potato—was investigated. Salinity caused a decrease in photosynthesis activity, which manifested as a decrease in the quantum yield of photosystem II and an increase in non-photochemical quenching. Along with photosynthesis limitation, there was a slight reduction in the relative water content in the leaves and a decrease in transpiration, determined by the crop water stress index. Furthermore, a decrease in cytosolic pH was detected in tobacco and potato plants transformed by the gene of pH-sensitive protein Pt-GFP. The potential mechanisms of the salinity influence on the activity of photosynthesis were analyzed with the comparison of the parameters’ dynamics, as well as the salt content in the leaves.
CITATION STYLE
Pecherina, A., Grinberg, M., Ageyeva, M., Zanegina, D., Akinchits, E., Brilkina, A., & Vodeneev, V. (2023). Salt-Induced Changes in Cytosolic pH and Photosynthesis in Tobacco and Potato Leaves. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 24(1). https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms24010491
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