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Publication Date:
March 2011
ISSN:
1437-4323
DOI:
10.1515/bot.2011.012

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Editor-in-Chief: Dring, Matthew

Editorial Board Member: Enriquez Dominguez, Susana / Heimann, Kirsten / Pang, Ka-Lai / Pohnert, Georg / Poulin, Michel / Amsler, Charles D. / Beardall, John / Berges, John A. / Campbell, Jinx / Dawes, Clinton J. / Hoppenrath, Mona / Wynne, Michael J.

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Rank 48 out of 97 in category Marine & Freshwater Biology and 92 out of 190 in category Plant Sciences in the 2011 Thomson Reuters Journal Citation Report/Science Edition

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Antioxidant response of the microalga Dunaliella salina under salt stress

1 / Bhavanath Jha1

1Discipline of Marine Biotechnology and Ecology, Central Salt and Marine Chemicals Research Institute (CSMCRI), Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), G.B. Marg, Bhavnagar-364021, Gujarat, India

Citation Information: Botanica Marina. Volume 54, Issue 2, Pages 195–199, ISSN (Online) 1437-4323, ISSN (Print) 0006-8055, DOI: 10.1515/bot.2011.012, March 2011

Publication History:
Received:
2010-05-12
Accepted:
2010-11-12
Published Online:
2011-03-15

Abstract

Hydrogen peroxide content in Dunaliella salina cells increases concomitantly with salinity, and maximum content occurred at 5.0 m NaCl concentration. Activity of the antioxidant enzyme superoxide dismutase (SOD, EC 1.15.1.1) increased significantly by two- and three-fold in 1.0 and 2.0 m salt concentrations, respectively, thereafter declining significantly. Unlike SOD, catalase (EC 1.11.1.6) activity decreased in tandem with salinity; however, there was no significant decrease in catalase activity up to 2.0 m salt concentration (compared to 0.5 m salinity). There was no significant decrease in catalase activity from 2.0 m to 5.0 m salinity, whereas a significant decrease was observed in 4.0 and 5.0 m salinity (compared to 1.0 m salinity). Ascorbic acid peroxidase (EC 1.11.1.11) activity decreased concurrently with salt stress up to 2.0 m, thereafter no significant change was observed in cells grown in varying salt concentrations (0.5–5.0 m NaCl). Detailed study of hydrogen peroxide content and antioxidant enzymes in response to varying salinity (0.5–5.0 m NaCl) has not been reported previously in Dunaliella salina. Antioxidant enzymes and H2O2 scavenging systems have short-term adaptation mechanisms for protection against salt stress and are not important in imparting salt stress tolerance to Dunaliella salina at high salinity because of production of secondary antioxidant metabolites, like β-carotene, which protect the alga against salt induced oxidative damages.

Keywords: antioxidant; catalase; Dunaliella; peroxidase; superoxide dismutase

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