# Can Rice Growth Substrate Substitute Rapeseed Growth Substrate in Rapeseed Blanket Seedling Technology? Lesson from Reactive Oxygen Species Production and Scavenging Analysis

**Authors:** Kaige Yi, Yun Ren, Hui Zhang, Baogang Lin, Pengfei Hao, Shuijin Hua

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/antiox13081022 · Antioxidants · 2024-08-22

## TL;DR

Using rice growth substrate instead of rapeseed's reduces seedling quality due to increased stress and poor ROS management.

## Contribution

The study reveals how reactive oxygen species production and scavenging differ under two growth substrates in rapeseed seedlings.

## Key findings

- Rapeseed seedling quality dropped significantly when grown in rice substrate compared to rapeseed substrate.
- Hydrogen peroxide levels were higher in rice substrate, affecting seedling growth and metabolism.
- Genotype differences were observed in how ROS were scavenged through enzymatic and non-enzymatic systems.

## Abstract

Rapeseed (Brassica napus L.) seedlings suffering from inappropriate growth substrate stress will present poor seedling quality. However, the regulatory mechanism for the production and scavenging of reactive oxygen species (ROS) caused by this type of stress remains unclear. In the current study, a split plot experiment design was implemented with two crop growth substrates—a rice growth substrate (RIS) and rapeseed growth substrate (RAS)—as the main plot and two genotypes—a hybrid and an open-pollinated variety (Zheyouza 1510 and Zheyou 51, respectively)—as the sub-plot. The seedling quality was assessed, and the ROS production/scavenging capacity was evaluated. Enzymatic and non-enzymatic systems, including ascorbic acid and glutathione metabolism, and RNA-seq data were analyzed under the two growth substrate treatments. The results revealed that rapeseed seedling quality decreased under RIS, with the plant height, maximum leaf length and width, and aboveground dry matter being reduced by 187.7%, 64.6%, 73.2%, and 63.8% on average, respectively, as compared to RAS. The main type of ROS accumulated in rapeseed plants was hydrogen peroxide, which was 47.8% and 14.1% higher under RIS than under RAS in the two genotypes, respectively. The scavenging of hydrogen peroxide in Zheyouza 1510 was the result of a combination of enzymatic systems, with significantly higher peroxidase (POD) and catalase (CAT) activity as well as glutathione metabolism, with significantly higher reduced glutathione (GSH) content, under RAS, while higher oxidized glutathione (GSSH) was observed under RIS. However, the scavenging of hydrogen peroxide in Zheyou 51 was the result of a combination of elevated oxidized ascorbic acid (DHA) under RIS and higher GSH content under RAS. The identified gene expression levels were in accordance with the observed enzyme expression levels. The results suggest that the cost of substituting RAS with RIS is a reduction in rapeseed seedling quality contributing to excessive ROS production and a reduction in ROS scavenging capacity.

## Linked entities

- **Proteins:** peroxidase (peroxidase PPOD1-like), Cat (Catalase)
- **Chemicals:** hydrogen peroxide (PubChem CID 784), ascorbic acid (PubChem CID 9888239), glutathione (PubChem CID 124886), reduced glutathione (PubChem CID 745)

## Full-text entities

- **Chemicals:** ROS (MESH:D017382), ascorbic acid (MESH:D001205), GSH (MESH:D005978), hydrogen peroxide (MESH:D006861), DHA (MESH:C027493)
- **Species:** Oryza sativa (Asian cultivated rice, species) [taxon 4530], Brassica napus (oilseed rape, species) [taxon 3708]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

60 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11351573/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11351573