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Assessing optimal nitrate/ ammonium- ratios in baby-leaf lettuce to enhance the heat stress tolerance under elevated CO(2) conditions

In recent years, the interest on baby-leaf lettuce has grown steadily, because it is richer in bioactive compounds than other traditional vegetables. However, the quality of lettuce is being increasingly affected by climate change. It is very rare for a climatic effect to occur in isolation. Even th...

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Autores principales: Collado-González, Jacinta, Piñero, María Carmen, Otalora, Ginés, López-Marín, Josefa, del Amor, Francisco M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9710774/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36449498
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0278309
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author Collado-González, Jacinta
Piñero, María Carmen
Otalora, Ginés
López-Marín, Josefa
del Amor, Francisco M.
author_facet Collado-González, Jacinta
Piñero, María Carmen
Otalora, Ginés
López-Marín, Josefa
del Amor, Francisco M.
author_sort Collado-González, Jacinta
collection PubMed
description In recent years, the interest on baby-leaf lettuce has grown steadily, because it is richer in bioactive compounds than other traditional vegetables. However, the quality of lettuce is being increasingly affected by climate change. It is very rare for a climatic effect to occur in isolation. Even then, a large body of work has only focused on the effect of isolated heat stress, fertilization, and elevated CO(2), on morphological, physiological and biochemical parameters. Thus, very few works have focused on how the combination of several of these factors can affect these parameters. For first time, the present work studied the combined effect derived from the application of two different levels of CO(2) (400 and 1000 ppm of CO(2)), four different NO(3)(-)/ NH(4)(+) ratios (100/0 (T-I), 100/0 before the short-term heat stress and finally without NO(3)(-) (T-II), 80/20 (T-III) and 50/50 (T-IV)), and a short-term heat stress (25 and 43°C), on some physiological and quality parameters (dry biomass, photosynthetic parameters, pigments content, lipid peroxidation and total soluble proteins content) of baby-leaf lettuce cv Derbi. Additionally, a comparison of that combined effect of all these parameters between inner and outer leaves was also performed. The results obtained indicated that the interaction between the nutrient solution containing a 50/50 NO(3)(-)/ NH(4)(+) ratio and a high concentration of CO(2) (1000 ppm) improved the biomass, photosynthesis, intercellular/external CO(2) concentration ratio (ci/ca), stomatal conductance (gs), evapotranspiration (E) and lipid peroxidation, and protein content in this baby-leaf lettuce. The results obtained in this work lead us to conclude that this existing interaction between the NO(3)(-)/ NH(4)(+) ratio and the elevated CO(2) concentration may be considered as a new strategy for making baby-leaf lettuce more resistant to heat stress, in other words, stronger against the ever more frequent heat waves.
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spelling pubmed-97107742022-12-01 Assessing optimal nitrate/ ammonium- ratios in baby-leaf lettuce to enhance the heat stress tolerance under elevated CO(2) conditions Collado-González, Jacinta Piñero, María Carmen Otalora, Ginés López-Marín, Josefa del Amor, Francisco M. PLoS One Research Article In recent years, the interest on baby-leaf lettuce has grown steadily, because it is richer in bioactive compounds than other traditional vegetables. However, the quality of lettuce is being increasingly affected by climate change. It is very rare for a climatic effect to occur in isolation. Even then, a large body of work has only focused on the effect of isolated heat stress, fertilization, and elevated CO(2), on morphological, physiological and biochemical parameters. Thus, very few works have focused on how the combination of several of these factors can affect these parameters. For first time, the present work studied the combined effect derived from the application of two different levels of CO(2) (400 and 1000 ppm of CO(2)), four different NO(3)(-)/ NH(4)(+) ratios (100/0 (T-I), 100/0 before the short-term heat stress and finally without NO(3)(-) (T-II), 80/20 (T-III) and 50/50 (T-IV)), and a short-term heat stress (25 and 43°C), on some physiological and quality parameters (dry biomass, photosynthetic parameters, pigments content, lipid peroxidation and total soluble proteins content) of baby-leaf lettuce cv Derbi. Additionally, a comparison of that combined effect of all these parameters between inner and outer leaves was also performed. The results obtained indicated that the interaction between the nutrient solution containing a 50/50 NO(3)(-)/ NH(4)(+) ratio and a high concentration of CO(2) (1000 ppm) improved the biomass, photosynthesis, intercellular/external CO(2) concentration ratio (ci/ca), stomatal conductance (gs), evapotranspiration (E) and lipid peroxidation, and protein content in this baby-leaf lettuce. The results obtained in this work lead us to conclude that this existing interaction between the NO(3)(-)/ NH(4)(+) ratio and the elevated CO(2) concentration may be considered as a new strategy for making baby-leaf lettuce more resistant to heat stress, in other words, stronger against the ever more frequent heat waves. Public Library of Science 2022-11-30 /pmc/articles/PMC9710774/ /pubmed/36449498 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0278309 Text en © 2022 Collado-González et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Collado-González, Jacinta
Piñero, María Carmen
Otalora, Ginés
López-Marín, Josefa
del Amor, Francisco M.
Assessing optimal nitrate/ ammonium- ratios in baby-leaf lettuce to enhance the heat stress tolerance under elevated CO(2) conditions
title Assessing optimal nitrate/ ammonium- ratios in baby-leaf lettuce to enhance the heat stress tolerance under elevated CO(2) conditions
title_full Assessing optimal nitrate/ ammonium- ratios in baby-leaf lettuce to enhance the heat stress tolerance under elevated CO(2) conditions
title_fullStr Assessing optimal nitrate/ ammonium- ratios in baby-leaf lettuce to enhance the heat stress tolerance under elevated CO(2) conditions
title_full_unstemmed Assessing optimal nitrate/ ammonium- ratios in baby-leaf lettuce to enhance the heat stress tolerance under elevated CO(2) conditions
title_short Assessing optimal nitrate/ ammonium- ratios in baby-leaf lettuce to enhance the heat stress tolerance under elevated CO(2) conditions
title_sort assessing optimal nitrate/ ammonium- ratios in baby-leaf lettuce to enhance the heat stress tolerance under elevated co(2) conditions
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9710774/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36449498
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0278309
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