Abstract:
Water stress is the major abiotic factor that limits crop productivity. Among various
strategies, seed priming is low cost, easy low risk approach to improve the abiotic stress
tolerance in crop plants. The effects of seed priming with varying concentrations of
chitosan (0.1, 0.25 and 0.50 %), sodium nitroprusside (SNP) (75, 100 and 125μM) and
sodium silicate (20, 40 and 60mM) on physiological and biochemical attributes in seeds,
seedlings and wheat plants under non-stress, osmotic stress by poly ethylene glycol
(PEG) and drought were appraised in this study. Seed priming with chitosan, SNP and
sodium silicate promoted the activities of proteases, soluble proteins, hydrolases, α-
amylase, α- naphthyl acetate esterase activities in the seeds. Moreover, tested seed
priming treatments induced enhancement in antioxidant enzymes. Hydropriming induced
modulations in seed biochemical processes were generally different and less prominent as
observed by other tested priming treatments. In general, tested seed priming treatments
brings out the production or activation of enzymes in the seeds that are required for the
degradation and mobilization of seeds reserves and defense response. In seed germination
experiments, osmotic stress induced by 15 % PEG-6000 adversely affected the seed
germination attributes while chitosan SNP and sodium silicate seed priming improved the
germination (FGM, GE, VI, GR, MGT and GI) and promoted the early seedling growth
under non-stress and osmotic stress conditions.
In seedling experiments, chitosan, SNP and sodium silicate priming generally resulted in
promotion of early seedling establishment and synchronized growth along with better
biochemical and physiological attributes. Osmotic stress increased the peroxidase,
protease, α-amylase activities, total soluble proteins, malondialdehyde (MDA) contents,
reducing and total sugars while dropped the relative water content in the leaves. Chitosan
seed priming improved the osmotic stress tolerance of seedlings evident from adjusted
antioxidants activities (POD, CAT, SOD) soluble sugars, improved CMS and leaf RWC
and reduced lipid peroxidation. Similarly, SNP priming significantly improved the CMS,
RWC, TPC, proteins and reducing sugars while reduced the hydrolases (protease, α-
amylase) activities and lipid peroxidation in seedlings providing evidence for lesser
osmotic stress induced injury and improvement in stress tolerance. Moreover, sodium
silicate (60mM) priming enhanced the POD, TPC, CMS, RWC and reducing sugars
while decreased the CAT, protease, α-amylase and SOD activities and MDA content in
leaves under osmotic stress indicating improvement in stress tolerance.
In pot experiments, drought stress adversely affected the biochemical, physiological
processes, and yield in wheat plants grown from non-primed seeds. In wheat plants
grown from seeds primed with chitosan, SNP or sodium silicate antioxidants (CAT,
POD, SOD and TPC), osmoprotectants (GB, proline and sugars), CMS, leaf water
relations (WP, OP, TP and RWC) and pigments generally improved while hydrolyzing
enzymes and lipid peroxidation decreased under drought stress. Chitosan SNP and
sodium silicate priming improved the grain yield, 100 grain weight and plant biomass
grown under drought stress. In conclusion, tested seed priming treatments successfully
improved the seed germination and performance and alleviated the adverse effects of
osmotic and drought stress in wheat seedling and plants respectively.