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Flavonoid and Leaf Gas Exchange Responses of Centella asiatica to Acute Gamma Irradiation and Carbon Dioxide Enrichment under Controlled Environment Conditions

The study was couducted to investigate the effects of gamma irradiation and CO(2) on flavonoid content and leaf gas exchange in C.asiatica. For flavonoid determination, the design was a split split plot based on Randomized Complete Block Design (RCBD). For other parameters, the designs were split pl...

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Autores principales: Moghaddam, Sina Siavash, Jaafar, Hawa Binti, Aziz, Maheran Abdul, Ibrahim, Rusli, Rahmat, Asmah Bt, Philip, Elizabeth
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6264585/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22027950
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules16118930
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author Moghaddam, Sina Siavash
Jaafar, Hawa Binti
Aziz, Maheran Abdul
Ibrahim, Rusli
Rahmat, Asmah Bt
Philip, Elizabeth
author_facet Moghaddam, Sina Siavash
Jaafar, Hawa Binti
Aziz, Maheran Abdul
Ibrahim, Rusli
Rahmat, Asmah Bt
Philip, Elizabeth
author_sort Moghaddam, Sina Siavash
collection PubMed
description The study was couducted to investigate the effects of gamma irradiation and CO(2) on flavonoid content and leaf gas exchange in C.asiatica. For flavonoid determination, the design was a split split plot based on Randomized Complete Block Design (RCBD). For other parameters, the designs were split plots. Statistical tests revealed significant differences in flavonoid contents of Centella asiatica leaves between different growth stages and various CO(2) treatments. CO(2) 400, G20 (400 = ambient CO(2); G20 = Plants exposed to 20 Gy) showed 82.90% higher total flavonoid content (TFC) in the 5th week than CO(2) 400 as control at its best harvest time (4th week). Increasing the concentration of CO(2) from 400 to 800 μmol/mol had significant effects on TFC and harvesting time. In fact, 800 μmol/mol resulted in 171.1% and 66.62% increases in TFC for control and irradiated plants, respectively. Moreover, increasing CO(2) concentration reduced the harvesting time to three and four weeks for control and irradiated plants, respectively. Enhancing CO(2) to 800 µmol/mol resulted in a 193.30% (CO(2) 800) increase in leaf biomass compared to 400 µmol/mol and 226.34% enhancement in irradiated plants (CO(2) 800, G20) [800 = Ambient CO(2); G20 = Plants exposed to 20 Gy] than CO(2) 400, G20. In addition, the CO(2) 800, G20 had the highest amount of flavonoid*biomass in the 4th week. The results of this study indicated that all elevated CO(2) treatments had higher PN than the ambient ones. The findings showed that when CO(2) level increased from 400 to 800 µmol/mol, stomatal conductance, leaf intercellular CO(2) and transpiration rate had the tendency to decrease. However, water use efficiency increased in response to elevated CO(2) concentration. Returning to the findings of this study, it is now possible to state that the proposed method (combined CO(2) and gamma irradiation) has the potential to increase the product value by reducing the time to harvest, increasing the yield per unit area via boosting photosynthesis capacity, as well as increasing biochemicals (flavonoids) per gram DM.
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spelling pubmed-62645852018-12-10 Flavonoid and Leaf Gas Exchange Responses of Centella asiatica to Acute Gamma Irradiation and Carbon Dioxide Enrichment under Controlled Environment Conditions Moghaddam, Sina Siavash Jaafar, Hawa Binti Aziz, Maheran Abdul Ibrahim, Rusli Rahmat, Asmah Bt Philip, Elizabeth Molecules Article The study was couducted to investigate the effects of gamma irradiation and CO(2) on flavonoid content and leaf gas exchange in C.asiatica. For flavonoid determination, the design was a split split plot based on Randomized Complete Block Design (RCBD). For other parameters, the designs were split plots. Statistical tests revealed significant differences in flavonoid contents of Centella asiatica leaves between different growth stages and various CO(2) treatments. CO(2) 400, G20 (400 = ambient CO(2); G20 = Plants exposed to 20 Gy) showed 82.90% higher total flavonoid content (TFC) in the 5th week than CO(2) 400 as control at its best harvest time (4th week). Increasing the concentration of CO(2) from 400 to 800 μmol/mol had significant effects on TFC and harvesting time. In fact, 800 μmol/mol resulted in 171.1% and 66.62% increases in TFC for control and irradiated plants, respectively. Moreover, increasing CO(2) concentration reduced the harvesting time to three and four weeks for control and irradiated plants, respectively. Enhancing CO(2) to 800 µmol/mol resulted in a 193.30% (CO(2) 800) increase in leaf biomass compared to 400 µmol/mol and 226.34% enhancement in irradiated plants (CO(2) 800, G20) [800 = Ambient CO(2); G20 = Plants exposed to 20 Gy] than CO(2) 400, G20. In addition, the CO(2) 800, G20 had the highest amount of flavonoid*biomass in the 4th week. The results of this study indicated that all elevated CO(2) treatments had higher PN than the ambient ones. The findings showed that when CO(2) level increased from 400 to 800 µmol/mol, stomatal conductance, leaf intercellular CO(2) and transpiration rate had the tendency to decrease. However, water use efficiency increased in response to elevated CO(2) concentration. Returning to the findings of this study, it is now possible to state that the proposed method (combined CO(2) and gamma irradiation) has the potential to increase the product value by reducing the time to harvest, increasing the yield per unit area via boosting photosynthesis capacity, as well as increasing biochemicals (flavonoids) per gram DM. MDPI 2011-10-25 /pmc/articles/PMC6264585/ /pubmed/22027950 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules16118930 Text en © 2011 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Moghaddam, Sina Siavash
Jaafar, Hawa Binti
Aziz, Maheran Abdul
Ibrahim, Rusli
Rahmat, Asmah Bt
Philip, Elizabeth
Flavonoid and Leaf Gas Exchange Responses of Centella asiatica to Acute Gamma Irradiation and Carbon Dioxide Enrichment under Controlled Environment Conditions
title Flavonoid and Leaf Gas Exchange Responses of Centella asiatica to Acute Gamma Irradiation and Carbon Dioxide Enrichment under Controlled Environment Conditions
title_full Flavonoid and Leaf Gas Exchange Responses of Centella asiatica to Acute Gamma Irradiation and Carbon Dioxide Enrichment under Controlled Environment Conditions
title_fullStr Flavonoid and Leaf Gas Exchange Responses of Centella asiatica to Acute Gamma Irradiation and Carbon Dioxide Enrichment under Controlled Environment Conditions
title_full_unstemmed Flavonoid and Leaf Gas Exchange Responses of Centella asiatica to Acute Gamma Irradiation and Carbon Dioxide Enrichment under Controlled Environment Conditions
title_short Flavonoid and Leaf Gas Exchange Responses of Centella asiatica to Acute Gamma Irradiation and Carbon Dioxide Enrichment under Controlled Environment Conditions
title_sort flavonoid and leaf gas exchange responses of centella asiatica to acute gamma irradiation and carbon dioxide enrichment under controlled environment conditions
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6264585/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22027950
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules16118930
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