Antioxidant capacity of sage grown on heavy metal-polluted soil
2010
Stancheva, I | Geneva, M | Hristozkova, M | Markovska, Y | Salamon, I
Oxidative stress response and essential oil composition of sage (Salvia officinalis L.), grown on industrially polluted soil were studied. Sage plants were grown on the soil polluted with Cd, Cu, Pb, Zn, and non-polluted control soil. One-year-old sage possessed a high potential for heavy metal accumulation mainly in the roots. Heavy metal pollution resulted in root and shoot dry biomass inhibition. The increased levels of hydrogen peroxide and MDA showed that the heavy metal uptake caused oxidative stress. The increase towards the control was observed in the levels of glutathione, ascorbate, dehydroascorbate, catalase, dehydroascorbate reductase, and glutathione peroxidase. Weak activities of the most enzymes of the ascorbate-glutathione cycle allowed to suppose that H₂O₂ neutralization is rather non-enzymatic than enzymatic process. Observed decline in α- and β-thujones and elevated camphor content in the sage leaves did not indicate a deterioration of the essential oil quality. Sage grown on heavy metal-polluted soil successfully accumulated cadmium, lead, and zinc, which is resulted in plant biomass inhibition, but essential oil yield and quality was not declined.
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