| Literature DB >> 26617619 |
Marcela Simontacchi1, Andrea Galatro2, Facundo Ramos-Artuso1, Guillermo E Santa-María3.
Abstract
Nitric oxide in plants may originate endogenously or come from surrounding atmosphere and soil. Interestingly, this gaseous free radical is far from having a constant level and varies greatly among tissues depending on a given plant's ontogeny and environmental fluctuations. Proper plant growth, vegetative development, and reproduction require the integration of plant hormonal activity with the antioxidant network, as well as the maintenance of concentration of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species within a narrow range. Plants are frequently faced with abiotic stress conditions such as low nutrient availability, salinity, drought, high ultraviolet (UV) radiation and extreme temperatures, which can influence developmental processes and lead to growth restriction making adaptive responses the plant's priority. The ability of plants to respond and survive under environmental-stress conditions involves sensing and signaling events where nitric oxide becomes a critical component mediating hormonal actions, interacting with reactive oxygen species, and modulating gene expression and protein activity. This review focuses on the current knowledge of the role of nitric oxide in adaptive plant responses to some specific abiotic stress conditions, particularly low mineral nutrient supply, drought, salinity and high UV-B radiation.Entities:
Keywords: UV-B; drought; mineral nutrition; nitric oxide; salinity; ultraviolet radiation
Year: 2015 PMID: 26617619 PMCID: PMC4637419 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2015.00977
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 5.753
Nitric oxide, stomatal movements, and plant water status.
| Plant material | Treatment | NO level in guard cells∗ | Observations | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SNP/SNAP | nd | Increased stomatal closure. | ||
| SNP + cPTIO | nd | Inhibition of stomatal closure. | ||
| SNP | nd | Enhanced relative water content. Decreased transpiration rate. | ||
| ABA + cPTIO | ↓ | Inhibition of ABA-dependent stomatal closure. | ||
| SNP/ABA | ↑ | Increased stomatal closure. | ||
| SNAP/SNP | nd | Inactivation of | ||
| UV-B | ↑ | Increased stomatal closure. | ||
| UV-B + cPTIO | ↓ | Inhibition of UVB-dependent stomatal closure. | ||
| ABA/SNP/GSNO | ↑ | Induction of stomatal closure. | ||
| ABA/nitrite | ↑ | Stimulation of NO synthesis, followed by stomatal closure. | ||
| ABA/H2O2 | ↑ | Stimulate stomatal closure. | ||
| H2O2 + PTIO | ↓ | Inhibition of stomatal closure. | ||
| Dehydration stress + SNP/nitrite | ↑ | Under water shortage the effect of NO-dependent stomatal closure was not observed. | ||
| SNAP/SNP | ↑ | Plants are defective in NO perception mechanism, and guard cells are insensitive to NO-induced closure. | ||
| Dehydration stress | ∗∗ | Enhanced resistance to dehydration, lower transpiration rate and stomatal conductance as compared to WT. |