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Salicylic acid treatment via the rooting medium interferes

Storm Shadow

Well-known member
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http://www.biomedsearch.com/nih/Salicylic-acid-treatment-via-rooting/21143731.html

Salicylic acid treatment via the rooting medium interferes with stomatal response, CO(2) fixation rate and carbohydrate metabolism in tomato, and decreases harmful effects of subsequent salt stress.

Salicylic acid (SA) applied at 10(-3)  m in hydroponic culture decreased stomatal conductance (g(s) ), maximal CO(2) fixation rate (A(max) ) and initial slopes of the CO(2) (A/C(i) ) and light response (A/PPFD) curves, carboxylation efficiency of Rubisco (CE) and photosynthetic quantum efficiency (Q), resulting in the death of tomato plants. However, plants could acclimate to lower concentrations of SA (10(-7) -10(-4)  m) and, after 3 weeks, returned to control levels of g(s) , photosynthetic performance and soluble sugar content. In response to high salinity (100 mm NaCl), the pre-treated plants exhibited higher A(max) as a function of internal CO(2) concentration (C(i) ) or photosynthetic photon flux density (PPFD), and higher CE and Q values than salt-treated controls, suggesting more effective photosynthesis after SA treatment. Growth in 10(-7) or 10(-4)  m SA-containing solution led to accumulation of soluble sugars in both leaf and root tissues, which remained higher in both plant parts during salt stress at 10(-4)  m SA. The activity of hexokinase (HXK) with glucose, but not fructose, as substrate was reduced by SA treatment in leaf and root samples, leading to accumulation of glucose and fructose in leaf tissues. HXK activity decreased further under high salinity in both plant organs. The accumulation of soluble sugars and sucrose in roots of plants growing in the presence of 10(-4)  m SA contributed to osmotic adjustment and improved tolerance to subsequent salt stress. Apart from its putative role in delaying senescence, decreased HXK activity may divert hexoses from catabolic reactions to osmotic adaptation
 

Scrogerman

Active member
Veteran
In a Good way then! Salt(sodium chloride) aint much good for plants & id rather induce SAR with SA,(ASA). dosage would be pretty important. Are you using it? Ive been reading quite a bit about RuBisCO lately.
nice link!
 

Sheriff Bart

Deputy Spade
Veteran
Ribulose 1,5 bisphosphate carboxylase oxygenase is the reason we are all alive
if you read much of anything about plants and you dont read about it id be surprised
that and it might be the most abundant protein on earth
 

Scrogerman

Active member
Veteran
Yeah man, RuBisCO is the most abundant enzyme/protein on earth, thats a fact bro, you are correct.
 
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