Silicon Amendment Escalates Cellular Si Deposition and Antioxidant Enzyme Defense against Scirpophaga incertulas (Walker) Attack in Rice

Antioxidant enzymes Biotic stress Chlorophyll Paddy Scirpophaga Silicon
["Panda, Surabhika","Das, Anindita","Das, Anath Bandhu","Panda, Santosh Kumar"] 2024-04-01 期刊论文
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Yellow stem borer of rice Scirpophaga incertulas, significantly reduce rice production throughout Asia. Silicon (Si) amendment in rice for resistance against biotic stress is gaining importance to protect crops from insect herbivory. Exogenous application of silicon in form of DAE (diatomaceous earth) at 0.5 to 2.5 g kg(-1) and RHA (rice husk ash) at 5.0 to 15.0 g kg(-1) soil significantly improved silicon uptake and reduced borer damage in both susceptible (TN1) and moderately resistant (GNR3) rice cultivars exhibiting the enhanced resistance against S. incertulas with a yield benefit to the tune of 1.91- fold over control. Si addition through DAE at 2.0 g kg(-1) soil registered a maximum of 1.55 and 2.27- fold increased Si uptake by TN1 and GNR3 plants respectively as against a corresponding increase of 2.37 and 2.24-fold by 12.5 g RHA kg(-1) soil. Chlorophyll was highest in plants receiving low dose of silicon and showed a downward trend with increase in dose. Feeding stimuli from S.incertulas larvae led to intense leaf silicificationly with significant increased silica cell deposit per mm row length, increased lobe size, and minimal distance between adjacent silica cells as evidenced from scanning electron microscopic studies. Increased Si content along with biotic stress activated antioxidant enzyme (super oxide dismutase, catalase, and peroxidise) defense in rice to mitigate oxidative stress. RHA supplemented plants with YSB infestation showed increased activity of the non-oxidative enzymes like phenylalanine lyase (3.5- fold) and tyrosine ammonia lyase (13.0 -fold) over control conferring a greater defense to paddy through induction of signal transduction process. The study thus, demonstrated the benefit of soil amendment with DAE and RHA in inducing host resistance against S. incertulas, as an eco-holistic approach in pest management in rice. Further, the finding is expected to be helpful in genetic mapping of known YSB resistance gene markers of candidate genes like hexose transporter, amino acid transporter and other genes related to defense signal mechanisms via jasmonic acid pathway.
来源平台:SILICON