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Oxidative stress injury in tomato plants induced by supplemental UV-B radiation

41

Citations

24

References

1997

Year

Abstract

Tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill. cv. PKM 1) plants growing under field conditions were exposed for 15 d to solar radiation with UV-B component (280 - 320 nm) enhanced to 6.3 kJ m-2 d-1. This simulated a 15% stratospheric ozone depletion over Madurai (9° 50' N latitude). Lipid peroxidation in the leaves of UV-B treated plants was 32% higher compared to the control. Superoxide dismutase (SOD) and catalase activities registered parallel promotion by 126 and 50 %, respectively, in the UV-B treated plants. Further, the contents of total phenols and anthocyanins in the leaves have also been enhanced by 40 and 156%, respectively. On the contrary, polyphenol oxidase activity demonstrated a 58 % inhibition in the leaves of UV-B treated plants. While anthocyanins and phenols are proposed to act as antioxidants, the reduction in polyphenol oxidase activity may maintain the turnover of phenols in the UV-B treated plants.

References

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