EN
The capacity of plants to achieve successful germination and early seedling establishment under high salinity is crucial for tolerance of plants to salt. The gaseous hormone ethylene has been implicated in modulating salt tolerance, but the detailed role of how ethylene modulates the response of early seedling establishment to salt is unclear. To better understand the role of the ethylene signal transduction pathway during germination and seedling establishment, an ethylene insensitive mutation (ein2-5) and an ethylene sensitive mutation (ctr1-1) of Arabidopsis were analyzed under saline conditions and compared with the wild type plant (Col-0) as control. High salinity (>100 mM NaCl) inhibited and delayed germination. These effects were more severe in the ethylene insensitive mutants (ein2-5) and less severe in the constitutive ethylene sensitive plants (ctr1-1) compared with Col-0 plants. Addition of the ethylene precursor 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid (ACC) or inhibitors of ethylene action implied that ethylene was essential for early seedling establishment under normal and saline conditions. Salt stress increased the endogenous concentration of hydrogen peroxide (H₂O₂) in germinating seeds and ACC reduced its concentration. Our results suggest that ethylene promotes germination under salinity by modulating the endogenous concentration of H₂O₂ in germinating seeds. These findings demonstrate that ethylene is involved in regulating germination as an initiator of the process rather than consequence, and that ethylene promotes germination by modulating the endogenous concentration of H₂O₂ in germinating seeds under salinity.