Title of article :
Effects of low doses of short-term gamma irradiation on growth and development through two generations of Pisum sativum
Author/Authors :
R. Zaka، نويسنده , , C. Chenal، نويسنده , , M. T. Misset، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
هفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Abstract :
The effects of short-term gamma radiation on pea plants were investigated by exposing 5-day-old seedlings with doses ranging from 0 to 60 Gy, and studying plant growth and development over two generations after irradiation. Doses higher than 6 Gy significantly inhibited the G1 plant growth and productivity, and no seedling survived irradiation with 40 Gy and above. These effects were transmitted and were even more severe in the next generation, G2. Irradiated G1 (≥10 Gy) and G2 (≥0.4 Gy) plants were significantly smaller than controls. The mean number of pods produced per plant was reduced by at least 20% at all doses in both G1 and G2. In parallel, the mean numbers of ovules and normally developed seeds per pod were significantly reduced after 10 Gy in G1 and after 0.4 Gy in G2, leading to a significant drop in seed production. This effect was correlated with a linear decrease in male fertility linked to abnormal meiosis (tetrads with micronuclei) as a function of doses from 0 to 10 Gy, in G1 and G2 plants. These long-term changes in plant development demonstrate a genomic instability induced by irradiation. However, there were neither quantitative nor qualitative changes in storage proteins in G1 seeds at any of the irradiation doses tested from 0 to 10 Gy.
Keywords :
gamma irradiation , Pisum sativum , Radio-induced effects , micronuclei , genomic instability
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment