Salt stress poses a significant threat to crop growth. While brassinolide (BR) has been shown to alleviate its adverse effects and modulate plant development, the precise mechanism underlying BR-induced salt tolerance in rice remains unclear. In this study, the Chaoyouqianhao and Huanghuazhan rice varieties were employed to investigate the effects of BR seed soaking on the seedling phenotype, physiology, transcriptome, and metabolome under salt stress. The results demonstrated that BR treatment significantly enhanced rice plant height, root length, biomass, and antioxidant enzyme activities, while reducing leaf membrane damage, promoting ion homeostasis, and improving the photosynthetic capacity and salt tolerance. The transcriptome analysis revealed that BR regulated the expression of 1042 and 826 genes linked to antioxidant activity, ion homeostasis, photosynthesis, and lipid metabolism under salt stress. These included genes involved in Na+ efflux (OsNCED2, OsHKT2;1, and OsHKT1;1), photosynthetic electron transport (OsFd5 and OsFdC1), photosystem II (OsPsbR1, OsPsbR2, and OsPsbP), and CO2 fixation. The metabolomic analysis identified 91 and 57 metabolite alterations induced by BR, primarily linked to amino acid, flavonoid, and lipid metabolism, with notable increases in antioxidant metabolites such as lignanoside, isorhamnetin, and L-glutamic acid. The integrated analysis highlighted the pivotal roles of 12-OPDA in α-linolenic acid metabolism and genes related to lipid metabolism, JA metabolism, and JA signal transduction in BR-mediated salt tolerance.
Keywords: brassinolide; metabolome; rice; salt stress; transcriptome.