Cargando…

Bioactivity of Size-Fractionated and Unfractionated Humic Substances From Two Forest Soils and Comparative Effects on N and S Metabolism, Nutrition, and Root Anatomy of Allium sativum L

Humic substances (HS) are powerful natural plant biostimulants. However, there is still a lack of knowledge about the relationship between their structure and bioactivity in plants. We extracted HS (THE1-2) from two forest soils covered with Pinus mugo (1) or Pinus sylvestris (2). The extracts were...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Pizzeghello, Diego, Schiavon, Michela, Francioso, Ornella, Dalla Vecchia, Francesca, Ertani, Andrea, Nardi, Serenella
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7457123/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32922415
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2020.01203
_version_ 1783575940134076416
author Pizzeghello, Diego
Schiavon, Michela
Francioso, Ornella
Dalla Vecchia, Francesca
Ertani, Andrea
Nardi, Serenella
author_facet Pizzeghello, Diego
Schiavon, Michela
Francioso, Ornella
Dalla Vecchia, Francesca
Ertani, Andrea
Nardi, Serenella
author_sort Pizzeghello, Diego
collection PubMed
description Humic substances (HS) are powerful natural plant biostimulants. However, there is still a lack of knowledge about the relationship between their structure and bioactivity in plants. We extracted HS (THE1-2) from two forest soils covered with Pinus mugo (1) or Pinus sylvestris (2). The extracts were subjected to weak acid treatment to produce size-fractionated HS (high molecular size, HMS1-2; low molecular size, LMS1-2). HS were characterized for total acidity, functional groups, element and auxin (IAA) contents, and hormone-like activity. HS concentrations ranging from 0 to 5 mg C L(−1) were applied to garlic (Allium sativum L.) plantlets in hydroponics to ascertain differences between unfractionated and size-fractionated HS in the capacity to promote mineral nutrition, root growth and cell differentiation, activity of enzymes related to plant development (invertase, peroxidase, and esterase), and N (nitrate reductase, glutamine synthetase) and S (O-acetylserine sulphydrylase) assimilation into amino acids. A positive linear dose-response relationship was determined for all HS in the range 0–1 mg C L(−1), while higher HS doses were less effective or ineffective in promoting physiological-biochemical attributes of garlic. Bioactivity was higher for size-fractionated HS according to the trend LMS1-2>HMS1-2>THE1-2, with LMS2 and HMS2 being overall more bioactive than LMS1 and HMS1, respectively. LMS1-2 contained more N, oxygenated functional groups and IAA compared to THE1-2 and HMS1-2. Also, they exhibited higher hormone-like activities. Such chemical properties likely accounted for the greater biostimulant action of LMS1-2. Beside plant growth, nutrition and N metabolism, HS stimulated S assimilation by promoting the enrichment of garlic plantlets with the S amino acid alliin, which has recognized beneficial properties in human health. Concluding, this study endorses that i) treating THE with a weak acid produced sized-fractionated HS with higher bioactivity and differing in properties, perhaps because of novel molecular arrangements of HS components that better interacted with garlic roots; ii) LMS from forest soils covered with P. mugo or P. sylvestris were the most bioactive; iii) the cover vegetation affected HS bioactivity iv); HS stimulated N and S metabolism with relevant benefits to crop nutritional quality.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-7457123
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2020
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-74571232020-09-11 Bioactivity of Size-Fractionated and Unfractionated Humic Substances From Two Forest Soils and Comparative Effects on N and S Metabolism, Nutrition, and Root Anatomy of Allium sativum L Pizzeghello, Diego Schiavon, Michela Francioso, Ornella Dalla Vecchia, Francesca Ertani, Andrea Nardi, Serenella Front Plant Sci Plant Science Humic substances (HS) are powerful natural plant biostimulants. However, there is still a lack of knowledge about the relationship between their structure and bioactivity in plants. We extracted HS (THE1-2) from two forest soils covered with Pinus mugo (1) or Pinus sylvestris (2). The extracts were subjected to weak acid treatment to produce size-fractionated HS (high molecular size, HMS1-2; low molecular size, LMS1-2). HS were characterized for total acidity, functional groups, element and auxin (IAA) contents, and hormone-like activity. HS concentrations ranging from 0 to 5 mg C L(−1) were applied to garlic (Allium sativum L.) plantlets in hydroponics to ascertain differences between unfractionated and size-fractionated HS in the capacity to promote mineral nutrition, root growth and cell differentiation, activity of enzymes related to plant development (invertase, peroxidase, and esterase), and N (nitrate reductase, glutamine synthetase) and S (O-acetylserine sulphydrylase) assimilation into amino acids. A positive linear dose-response relationship was determined for all HS in the range 0–1 mg C L(−1), while higher HS doses were less effective or ineffective in promoting physiological-biochemical attributes of garlic. Bioactivity was higher for size-fractionated HS according to the trend LMS1-2>HMS1-2>THE1-2, with LMS2 and HMS2 being overall more bioactive than LMS1 and HMS1, respectively. LMS1-2 contained more N, oxygenated functional groups and IAA compared to THE1-2 and HMS1-2. Also, they exhibited higher hormone-like activities. Such chemical properties likely accounted for the greater biostimulant action of LMS1-2. Beside plant growth, nutrition and N metabolism, HS stimulated S assimilation by promoting the enrichment of garlic plantlets with the S amino acid alliin, which has recognized beneficial properties in human health. Concluding, this study endorses that i) treating THE with a weak acid produced sized-fractionated HS with higher bioactivity and differing in properties, perhaps because of novel molecular arrangements of HS components that better interacted with garlic roots; ii) LMS from forest soils covered with P. mugo or P. sylvestris were the most bioactive; iii) the cover vegetation affected HS bioactivity iv); HS stimulated N and S metabolism with relevant benefits to crop nutritional quality. Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-08-14 /pmc/articles/PMC7457123/ /pubmed/32922415 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2020.01203 Text en Copyright © 2020 Pizzeghello, Schiavon, Francioso, Dalla Vecchia, Ertani and Nardi http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Plant Science
Pizzeghello, Diego
Schiavon, Michela
Francioso, Ornella
Dalla Vecchia, Francesca
Ertani, Andrea
Nardi, Serenella
Bioactivity of Size-Fractionated and Unfractionated Humic Substances From Two Forest Soils and Comparative Effects on N and S Metabolism, Nutrition, and Root Anatomy of Allium sativum L
title Bioactivity of Size-Fractionated and Unfractionated Humic Substances From Two Forest Soils and Comparative Effects on N and S Metabolism, Nutrition, and Root Anatomy of Allium sativum L
title_full Bioactivity of Size-Fractionated and Unfractionated Humic Substances From Two Forest Soils and Comparative Effects on N and S Metabolism, Nutrition, and Root Anatomy of Allium sativum L
title_fullStr Bioactivity of Size-Fractionated and Unfractionated Humic Substances From Two Forest Soils and Comparative Effects on N and S Metabolism, Nutrition, and Root Anatomy of Allium sativum L
title_full_unstemmed Bioactivity of Size-Fractionated and Unfractionated Humic Substances From Two Forest Soils and Comparative Effects on N and S Metabolism, Nutrition, and Root Anatomy of Allium sativum L
title_short Bioactivity of Size-Fractionated and Unfractionated Humic Substances From Two Forest Soils and Comparative Effects on N and S Metabolism, Nutrition, and Root Anatomy of Allium sativum L
title_sort bioactivity of size-fractionated and unfractionated humic substances from two forest soils and comparative effects on n and s metabolism, nutrition, and root anatomy of allium sativum l
topic Plant Science
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7457123/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32922415
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2020.01203
work_keys_str_mv AT pizzeghellodiego bioactivityofsizefractionatedandunfractionatedhumicsubstancesfromtwoforestsoilsandcomparativeeffectsonnandsmetabolismnutritionandrootanatomyofalliumsativuml
AT schiavonmichela bioactivityofsizefractionatedandunfractionatedhumicsubstancesfromtwoforestsoilsandcomparativeeffectsonnandsmetabolismnutritionandrootanatomyofalliumsativuml
AT franciosoornella bioactivityofsizefractionatedandunfractionatedhumicsubstancesfromtwoforestsoilsandcomparativeeffectsonnandsmetabolismnutritionandrootanatomyofalliumsativuml
AT dallavecchiafrancesca bioactivityofsizefractionatedandunfractionatedhumicsubstancesfromtwoforestsoilsandcomparativeeffectsonnandsmetabolismnutritionandrootanatomyofalliumsativuml
AT ertaniandrea bioactivityofsizefractionatedandunfractionatedhumicsubstancesfromtwoforestsoilsandcomparativeeffectsonnandsmetabolismnutritionandrootanatomyofalliumsativuml
AT nardiserenella bioactivityofsizefractionatedandunfractionatedhumicsubstancesfromtwoforestsoilsandcomparativeeffectsonnandsmetabolismnutritionandrootanatomyofalliumsativuml