Insights into Selenium-Modulated Amino Acids and Carbohydrates as Osmolytes Linked to Photosynthetic Efficiency in Drought-Stressed Edamame
Masego Sekhurwane, Mpho Mafa, Zoltán Kovács, László Kaszás, Béla Kovács, Brigitta Tóth, Makoena Joyce MoloiDrought impairs osmotic adjustment and photosynthetic performance in legumes; however, the role of micronutrients in modulating these responses across genotypes remains unclear. This study investigated the effects of selenium on the osmolytes and photosynthetic efficiency in two vegetable-soybean (Glycine max L. Merrill) cultivars differing in drought responses: UVE14 (drought-tolerant) and UVE17 (drought-susceptible). Plants were grown under well-watered (100% soil water-holding capacity, WHC) and water-limited (30% soil WHC) conditions, with or without soil-applied selenium. Free amino acids, soluble sugars, chlorophyll pigments, vegetation indices, and chlorophyll fluorescence parameters were assessed at the flowering and pod-filling stages. Under drought conditions, selenium enhanced tolerance primarily by modulating free amino acid metabolism at flowering, increasing aspartate, asparagine, glutamine, and glutamate levels, alongside improvements in chlorophyll content, canopy greenness, and PSII photochemical efficiency. These responses indicate a coordinated adjustment between nitrogen metabolism and photosynthetic function. Both cultivars benefited from selenium application, although the responses were more pronounced in the susceptible cultivar (UVE17). Selenium-induced changes in soluble sugar content were greater under well-watered conditions in both cultivars. The limited accumulation of stress-associated osmolytes, such as proline, following selenium soil drench suggests reduced cellular disruption and mitigation of drought-induced stress. These findings highlight selenium as a context-dependent modulator of drought resilience and emphasize cultivar- and developmental stage-specific effects.