Chemical signaling under abiotic stress environment in plants

Tuteja, Narendra ; Sopory, Sudhir K. (2008) Chemical signaling under abiotic stress environment in plants Plant Signaling & Behavior, 3 (8). pp. 525-536. ISSN 1559-2316

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Official URL: https://www.landesbioscience.com/journals/psb/arti...

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.4161/psb.3.8.6186

Abstract

Many chemicals are critical for plant growth and development and play an important role in integrating various stress signals and controlling downstream stress responses by modulating gene expression machinery and regulating various transporters/pumps and biochemical reactions. These chemicals include calcium (Ca2+), cyclic nucleotides, polyphosphoinositides, nitric oxide (NO), sugars, abscisic acid (ABA), jasmonates (JA), salicylic acid (SA) and polyamines. Ca2+ is one of the very important ubiquitous second messengers in signal transduction pathways and usually its concentration increases in response to the stimuli including stress signals. Many Ca2+ sensors detect the Ca2+ signals and direct them to downstream signaling pathways by binding and activating diverse targets. cAMP or cGMP protects the cell with ion toxicity. Phosphoinositides are known to be involved both in transmission of signal across the plasma membrane and in intracellular signaling. NO activates various defense genes and acts as a developmental regulator in plants. Sugars affect the expression of many genes involved in photosynthesis, glycolysis, nitrogen metabolism, sucrose and starch metabolism, defense mechanisms and cell cycle regulation. ABA, JA, SA and polyamines are also involved in many stress responses. Cross-talk between these chemical signaling pathways is very common in plant responses to abiotic and bitotic factors. In this article we have described the role of these chemicals in initiating signaling under stress conditions mainly the abiotic stress.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to Landes Bioscience.
ID Code:49956
Deposited On:21 Jul 2011 09:52
Last Modified:04 Jul 2012 06:15

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