| Literature DB >> 25237317 |
Abstract
The geomagnetic field (Entities:
Keywords: cryptochrome; evolution; geomagnetic field; magnetoreception; plant responses
Year: 2014 PMID: 25237317 PMCID: PMC4154392 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2014.00445
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 5.753
Summary of magnetic field (MF) effects on plants.
| Pollen | Release of internal Ca2+ | 10 μT | Betti et al., | |
| Root and shoot | Decrease in the cell number with enhanced DNA content | <GMF | Nanushyan and Murashov, | |
| Delayed flowering Reproductive growth | Near null | Xu et al., | ||
| Protoplasts Seeds | Increased protoplasts fusion | <GMF | Nedukha et al., | |
| Seed germination | 1500 nT | Radhakrishnan and Kumari, | ||
| Seedlings | Increases in fresh weight | 20 μT | Fischer et al., | |
| Seedlings | Decrease in fresh weight | 10 nT | Lebedev et al., | |
| Roots | Negative gravitropism | <GMF | Kordyum et al., | |
| Protoplasts | Increased protoplasts fusion | <GMF | Nedukha et al., | |
| Epicotyl | Promotion of cell elongation; ultrastructural peculiarities increase in the [Ca2+]cyt level | <GMF | Negishi et al., | |
| Stimulation/inhibition of growth | <GMF | Rakosy-Tican et al., | ||
| Seeds and seedlings | Activation of esterases reduction of growth | from 20 nT to 0.1 mT | Bogatina et al., | |
| Root tips | Alter membrane transport processes | 10 and 100 μT | Stange et al., | |
| Seed | Promotion of germination | 99 mT | Naz et al., | |
| Seedlings | Increased lipid peroxidation and H2O2 levels | 7 mT | Cakmak et al., | |
| Seedlings | Enhanced blue light-dependent phosphorylations of CRY1 and CRY2; hypocotyl growth | 500 μT | Harris et al., | |
| Callus culture | 15 T | Weise et al., | ||
| Amyloplast displacement | Manzano et al., | |||
| Diamagnetic levitation | Herranz et al., | |||
| Proteomic alterations | Paul et al., | |||
| Induced expression of the Adh/GUS transgene in the roots and leaves | ||||
| Seedlings | Increased root and leaf yield | 5 mT | Rochalska, | |
| Increased chlorophyll content | Rochalska, | |||
| Pollen | Increased pollen germination | >GMF | Alexander and Ganeshan, | |
| Protoplast | Effect on cell wall | 302 mT | Haneda et al., | |
| Seed | Promotion of germination | 0–250 mT | Vashisth and Nagarajan, | |
| Root | Increase in root length, surface area and volume | |||
| Seedlings | Decrease of SOD, CAT, and APX activities | 2 mT | Aleman et al., | |
| Seed | Promotion of germination | 500, 750 μT | Kobayashi et al., | |
| Seedlings | Increase in superoxide radicals and H2O2 | 100–250 mT | Bhardwaj et al., | |
| Leaf | Reduced rhythmic leaflet movements | 50 mT | Sharma et al., | |
| Seedling | Increased root length and number | 2× GMF | Li, | |
| Plantlets | Increased fruit yield per plant | 0.096, 0.192 and 0.384 T | Esitken and Turan, | |
| Seedlings | Reduction of O2-radical level | 150,200 mT | Baby et al., | |
| Reactive oxygen species production | ||||
| Increased Rubisco | Shine et al., | |||
| Seedlings | Increased seedling dry weight, root length, root surface area and root volume | 50, 200 mT | Vashisth and Nagarajan, | |
| Increased activities of α-amylase, dehydrogenase and protease | ||||
| Seedlings | Increased chlorophyll concentration | >GMF | Turker et al., | |
| Seedlings | Oxidative burst | 50-Hz | Regoli et al., | |
| Seedlings | Increases in length and weight | 125 mT | Martinez et al., | |
| Seedlings | Increased peroxidase activity | 200,300 mT | Xia and Guo, | |
| Seed | Reduction of germination | 125,250 mT | Florez et al., | |
| Tissue cultures | Increased regeneration capability | 2.9–4.8 mT | Yaycili and Alikamanoglu, | |
| Tissue cultures | Increased regeneration capability | 2.9–4.8 mT | Yaycili and Alikamanoglu, | |
| Cells | Effects on CAT and APX activity | 30 mT | Rajabbeigi et al., | |
| Seeds | Promotion of germination | 2 or 7 mT | Sakhnini, | |
| Increased chlorophyll emission fluorescence | 3 100,160 mT | Jovanic and Sarvan, | ||
| Seed | Promotion of germination | 60,120,180 mT | Iqbal et al., | |
| Seedlings | Increased length and weight | 125, 250 mT | Carbonell et al., | |
| Induction of SOD activity | Polovinkina et al., | |||
| Seedlings | Suppression of SOD and CAT activities | 185–650 μT | Serdyukov and Novitskii, | |
| Reduced CO2 uptake | 500 μT | Yano et al., | ||
| Stimulation of lipid synthesis | Novitskaya et al., | |||
| Seed | Promotion of germination | 160–200 mT | De Souza et al., | |
| Seed | Promotion of germination | 160–200 mT | De Souza et al., | |
| Shoots | Effect on gravitropismo | |||
| Magnetophoretic curvature | Hasenstein and Kuznetsov, | |||
| Increased mean fruit weight, yield per plant and per area | De Souza et al., | |||
| Geminivirus and early blight and a reduced infection rate | ||||
| Seedlings | Amyloplast displacement | 4 mT | Hasenstein et al., | |
| Plantlets | Growth promotion and enhancement of CO2 uptake enhanced lipid order | Iimoto et al., | ||
| Poinapen et al., | ||||
| Suspension culture | Promotion of taxol production | 3.5 mT | Shang et al., | |
| Inflorescence | Pink mutations in stamen hair cells | 0.16, 0.76, 0.78 T | Baum and Nauman, | |
| Seed | Promotion of germination | 4 or 7 mT; 30-mT | Cakmak et al., | |
| Seedlings | Amyloplast displacement increased catalase but reduced peroxidase activity | 30-mT | Hasenstein et al., | |
| Payez et al., | ||||
| Plantlets | Accumulation of ROS | 15 mT | Jouni et al., | |
| Modification of catalase and MAPK; accumulation of H2O2 | 30 mT | Haghighat et al., | ||
| Seed | Promotion of germination | 87 to 226 mT | Mahajan and Pandey, | |
| Seedlings | Decrease of malondialdehyde, H2O2 and O−2, and increase of NO and NOS activity | 600 mT | Chen et al., | |
| Seed | Promotion of germination | Bilalis et al., | ||
| Seedlings | Increase of fresh weight | 125,250 mT | Florez et al., | |
| Amyloplast displacement | Hasenstein et al., | |||
| Decreased levels of hydrogen peroxide and antioxidant defense system enzymes | 100,200 mT | Anand et al., | ||
| Shine and Guruprasad, | ||||
| Reduction of antioxidant enzymes | Turker et al., | |||
| Increased stomatal conductance and chlorophyll content | 100,200 mT | |||
| 100,200 mT | ||||
Figure 1The evolutionary history of plants. The abundance and diversity of plant fossils increase in the Silurian Period where the first macroscopic evidence for land plants has been found. There is evidence for the evolution of several plant groups of the late Devonian and early Carboniferous periods (homosporous ferns and gymnosperms). From the late Devonian through the base of the late Cretaceous period, gymnosperms underwent dramatic evolutionary radiations and became the dominant group of vascular plants in most habitats. Flowering plants probably also originated during this time, but they did not become a significant part of the fossil flora until the middle of the Cretaceous Period (Modified from Occhipinti et al., 2014).
Figure 2Geomagnetic field reversals and Angiosperm evolution. In the direct comparison of GMF polarity and diversion of Angiosperms it is interesting to note that most of the diversion occurred during periods of normal magnetic polarity (Modified from Occhipinti et al., 2014).
Figure 3Cryptochrome activation and inactivation reactions. Blue light activates cryptochrome through absorbing a photon by the flavin cofactor. FAD becomes promoted to an excited FAD* state and receives an electron from a nearby tryptophan, leading to the formation of the [FADH• + Trp•] radical pair, which exists in singlet (1) and triplet (3) overall electron spin states by coherent geomagnetic field-dependent interconversions. Under aerobic conditions, FADH• slowly reverts back to the initial inactive FAD state through the also inactive FADH− state of the flavin cofactor (Modified from Occhipinti et al., 2014).