1. Plant growth-promoting bacteria as affected by N availability as a suitable strategy to enhance the nutritional composition of lamb's lettuce affected by global warming.
- Author
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Collado-González J, Carmen Piñero M, Otalora G, Lopez-Marín J, and Del Amor FM
- Subjects
- Humans, Global Warming, Heat-Shock Response, Bacteria genetics, Bacteria metabolism, Nitrates metabolism, Valerianella
- Abstract
Heat and nutritional stresses have a significantly effect on the accumulation of bioactive and other compounds harmful to human health, like nitrates, in green leafy vegetables like lamb's lettuce. Plant growth-promoting bacteria (PGPB) have shown to confer beneficial biochemical changes to various crops under different stresses. The hypothesis proposed here is that the combination of optimal N level (2.5 Mm, 12 mM or 20 mM of N) with the inoculation of PGPB in plants exposed to heat shock (43 °C) may be a good strategy to obtain healthier lamb's lettuce with a higher yield. Results showed that a dose of 20 mM N can be considered as overfertilization. Moreover, the inoculation of plants fed with fertilizers with reduced N and under heat stress, resulted in higher productivity and content of sugars (60 %), amino acids (94 %), nitrogen (21 %), and total phenolic compounds (30 %), and a reduced content of nitrates (27 %)., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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