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Kinetin alleviates chromium toxicity on growth and PS II photochemistry in Nostoc muscorum by regulating antioxidant system.

The present study was undertaken to evaluate the metal toxicity alleviating effects of kinetin (KN, 10 nM) on growth, photosynthetic pigments and photochemistry of PS II in the cyanobacterium Nostoc muscorum exposed to chromium (CrVI ) stress (100 and 150 µM). Chromium declined growth, photosynthetic pigments (chlorophyll a, phycocyanin and carotenoids), photosynthetic oxygen evolution rate and parameters of fluorescence kinetics (ϕP0 , FV /F0 , ϕE0 , Ψ0 and PIABS except F0 /FV ) in concentration dependent manner, while stimulating effects on respiration, energy flux parameters (ABS/RC, TR0 /RC, ET0 /RC and DI0 /RC), oxidative stress biomarkers i.e., superoxide radical (SOR), hydrogen peroxide (H2 O2 ) and lipid peroxidation (TBARS contents) and antioxidative enzymes: superoxide dismutase (SOD), peroxidase (POD), catalase (CAT) and glutathione-S-transferase (GST), were observed. However, upon addition of KN in the growth medium an alleviating effect against chromium induced toxicity on growth, photosynthetic pigments and photochemistry of PS II was recorded. This had occurred due to substantial reduction in levels of oxidative stress biomarkers: SOR, H2 O2 and TBARS contents with concomitant rise in activity of antioxidative enzymes: SOD, POD, CAT and GST and appreciable lowering in the cellular accumulation of chromium. The overall results demonstrate that KN application significantly alleviated chromium induced toxicity on growth performance of the cyanobacterium N. muscorum due to significant improvement in photosynthetic pigments and photochemistry of PS II by up-regulating the activity of antioxidative enzymes, and declining cellular accumulation of chromium. Furthermore, Cr induced toxicity at lower dose (100 µM) was found to be ameliorated more efficiently in N. muscorum following supplementation of KN.

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