Metabolic changes induced by manganese in chamomile

Authors

KOVÁČIK Jozef DRESLER Sławomir WOJCIAK-KOSIOR Magdalena HLADKÝ Juraj BABULA Petr

Year of publication 2018
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source Plant Physiology and Biochemistry
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Medicine

Citation
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.plaphy.2018.10.031
Keywords Antioxidants; Fluorescence microscopy; Heavy metals; Soil pollution
Description Manganese (Mn) uptake and toxicity in chamomile (Matricaria chamomilla) and changes of phenolic metabolites in plants grown in the soil (1000 mu M Mn2+) or hydroponic culture (100 or 1000 mu M Mn2+) were studied. Under soil cultivation, Mn excess reduced growth and induced symptoms of oxidative stress (including total ROS, hydroxyl radical and lipid peroxidation as detected by fluorescence microscopy), concomitantly with depletion of non-protein thiols and ascorbic acid. Total soluble phenols and individual phenolic acids were rather depleted (p-coumaric, chlorogenic, and protocatechuic acids) or unaltered (vanillic and caffeic acids). Shoot Mn content reached 2806 mu g/g DW with BAF 51.0 in the soil culture. In hydroponics, tetraploid plants contained less Mn in both shoots and roots than diploid ones with bioaccumulation factor and translocation factor (diploid/tetraploid) 57.1/37.9 and 0.39/0.32 in 1000 mu M Mn treatment. Plants cultured in hydroponics revealed stimulation of some phenolic acids, mainly chlorogenic acid in the shoots and p-hydroxybenzoic and vanillic acids in the roots (more extensively in tetraploid ones which contained less Mn). Data indicate that excessive Mn accumulation has negative impact not only on the growth but also on phenolic metabolites in young plants mainly. Detailed comparison of the observed metabolic changes with limited literature focused on Mn physiology is provided as well.

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