| Literature DB >> 36176673 |
Ali Raza1, Hajar Salehi2, Md Atikur Rahman3, Zainab Zahid4, Maryam Madadkar Haghjou5, Shiva Najafi-Kakavand6, Sidra Charagh7, Hany S Osman8, Mohammed Albaqami9, Yuhui Zhuang10, Kadambot H M Siddique11, Weijian Zhuang1.
Abstract
Due to global climate change, abiotic stresses are affecting plant growth, productivity, and the quality of cultivated crops. Stressful conditions disrupt physiological activities and suppress defensive mechanisms, resulting in stress-sensitive plants. Consequently, plants implement various endogenous strategies, including plant hormone biosynthesis (e.g., abscisic acid, jasmonic acid, salicylic acid, brassinosteroids, indole-3-acetic acid, cytokinins, ethylene, gibberellic acid, and strigolactones) to withstand stress conditions. Combined or single abiotic stress disrupts the normal transportation of solutes, causes electron leakage, and triggers reactive oxygen species (ROS) production, creating oxidative stress in plants. Several enzymatic and non-enzymatic defense systems marshal a plant's antioxidant defenses. While stress responses and the protective role of the antioxidant defense system have been well-documented in recent investigations, the interrelationships among plant hormones, plant neurotransmitters (NTs, such as serotonin, melatonin, dopamine, acetylcholine, and γ-aminobutyric acid), and antioxidant defenses are not well explained. Thus, this review discusses recent advances in plant hormones, transgenic and metabolic developments, and the potential interaction of plant hormones with NTs in plant stress response and tolerance mechanisms. Furthermore, we discuss current challenges and future directions (transgenic breeding and genome editing) for metabolic improvement in plants using modern molecular tools. The interaction of plant hormones and NTs involved in regulating antioxidant defense systems, molecular hormone networks, and abiotic-induced oxidative stress tolerance in plants are also discussed.Entities:
Keywords: GABA; abiotic stress; climate change; drought stress; genetic engineering; melatonin; transgenic approach
Year: 2022 PMID: 36176673 PMCID: PMC9514553 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2022.961872
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 6.627
FIGURE 1The role of phytohormones in improving plant tolerance against multiple abiotic stresses. Under stress conditions, phytohormones can modulate the stress intensity in plants by triggering defense mechanisms and thus regulate physio-biochemical processes by increasing plant tolerance to environmental stress. CK, GA, ABA, IAA, and JA mainly play inhibitory roles, whereas BRs, SA, SLs, and ethylene play stimulatory roles in improving several physiological and biochemical mechanisms under stress conditions. Notably, ABA is a primary driving force, playing a vital role alone or combined with other hormones under stress. Furthermore, CKs and auxin play a dual role (inhibitory and stimulatory) by regulating plant growth and development processes.
FIGURE 2Management of ROS metabolism and signaling in plants under stress conditions. Cellular ROS accumulation is controlled by three main methods—(1) ROS generation, (2) ROS scavenging, and (3) ROS transport—which maintain ROS concentrations and produce various ROS signatures and gradients that act as signals in various abiotic factor-response signal transduction pathways. These redox regulations lead to coordinated changes in the plant’s physiology, metabolome, proteome, methylome, and transcriptome. Dashed arrows show that ROS generation, scavenging, and transport can be controlled by the ‘redox state’ of plant cells under stress. Figure based on the concept of Mittler et al. (2004, 2022). For more information on ROS metabolism and signaling, readers are referred to Mittler et al. (2022). ROS, reactive oxygen species; O2, oxygen; H2O, water.
FIGURE 3Oxidative stress in plants and its significance. Under abiotic-stress-induced oxidative stress, ROS generation is the most significant step, which leads to the battle for equilibrium between ROS and antioxidant defense. This involves substantial crosstalk and consequences between stress signals and plant growth and yield reduction. For instance, minor damage caused by oxidative stress can improve growth and yield, whereas extreme oxidative stress can significantly reduce plant growth and yield—modified from Hasanuzzaman et al. (2020a). ROS, reactive oxygen species; H2O2, hydrogen peroxide; O2, oxygen; 1O2, singlet oxygen; 3O2, triplet oxygen; , superoxide; OH∙, hydroxyl radical.
FIGURE 4The proposed model demonstrates the state-of-the-art potential of a phytohormone-mediated antioxidant defense system under abiotic stress. Notably, phytohormones decrease the damaging effect of oxidative stress induced by abiotic stress because they act as secondary messengers to initiate antioxidants and can thus scavenge ROS in stressed plants. Interestingly, exogenous phytohormone application can reduce ROS overproduction, enhancing the activities of several antioxidant defense systems and stress tolerance; it varies with the type of stress, plant type, and duration. However, ROS overproduction can significantly reduce growth and yield under stressful conditions. In addition, exogenous phytohormones can increase the production and functionality of endogenous hormones and transcript levels of antioxidant enzyme-encoding genes, e.g., SOD, CAT, and POD. The optimal dose and growth stage for phytohormone application needs further investigation—modified from Raza et al. (2021c) with permission from the publisher (Springer Nature).
Application of some major plant hormones to plants under stress and their impact on antioxidant systems. Notably, all presented studies increased stress tolerance and improved plant health. Abbreviations are explained in the text.
| Stress type | Stress condition | Concentration | Species | Key findings and impact on antioxidant systems | References |
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| Drought and heat | PEG solution (−0.7 MPa), 8 h, and 28–42°C with an interval of 2°C h–1 | 100 μM | Maize ( | ABA-induced antioxidant defense system increased stress tolerance, and SOD, CAT, APX, and GR activities increased in leaves and roots |
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| Chilling | 10°/6°C (day/night); 1, 3, 6, 12, 24, 48, 72, and 120 h | 0.57 mM | Chili pepper ( | ABA increased stress tolerance by increasing SOD and guaiacol peroxidase activities |
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| Drought | 15% PEG; 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 days | 10 μM | Wheat ( | ABA enhanced drought tolerance by regulating GSH-AsA encoding genes and increasing GSH and AsA activities in leaves and roots |
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| Drought and salinity | 5, 10, and 15% PEG; 10 days, and 0.87 and 1% NaCl, 7 days | 50 μM | Cotton ( | ABA application increased stress tolerance and improved SOD and CAT activities and proline level |
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| Cold, salinity, osmotic and UV-B radiation, respectively | 4°C, 1, 3, 6, 12, or 24 h; 200 mM NaCl; 20% PEG and 8 W UV-B lamp, 0.5, 1, 3, 6, or 12 h, respectively | 50 μM | Arabidopsis ( | Exogenous ABA increased tolerance to salt and oxidative stresses and improved SOD and CAT activities under stress |
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| Heavy metals | Total and available Cd 8.46 and 2.12 mg kg–1; total and available Pb 753 and 230 mg kg–1 | 0, 20, 40, and 60 μmol L–1 | ABA application increased total Chl content and antioxidant capacity and significantly alleviated metal-induced growth inhibition |
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| Salinity | 200 mM NaCl, 72 h | 1 mM SNP and 10 μM ABA | Rice ( | ABA improved stress tolerance and was involved in the recovery of antioxidation pathways, osmotic tolerance, and carbohydrate metabolism |
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| Salinity | 150 mM NaCl; 3 days | 2 mM | Wheat ( | Exogenous supply of JA increased stress tolerance by reducing MDA and H2O2 levels and improving CAT, SOD, POD, and APX activities, and GSH, Chl b, and carotenoid concentrations |
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| Drought | 15% PEG, 48 h | 0.5 mM | JA treatment improved oxidative stress tolerance by increasing proline contents, AsA/DHA ratios, GSSG, GPX, GR, Gly I, DHAR activities. It also increased seedling fresh and dry weights |
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| Nickel | 2 mM Ni solution, 15 days | 1 nM | Soybean ( | JA supplementation improved osmolytes and increased the activities of SOD (40.04%), POD (28.22%), CAT (48.53%), and APX (56.79%) |
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| Salinity | 0.67, 5, 10, and 15 dS m–1 | 0.5 mM | Barley ( | JA treatment increased stress tolerance by improving the efficiency of SOD, CAT, POX, and K+/Na+ |
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| Cold | 5°C; 12, 24, and 48 h | 150 μM | Apple ( | JA reduced oxidative injury and improved activities of AsA, DHA, APX, MDHAR, DHAR, GSH/GSSG ratio, and GR at different time points (12, 24, and 48 h) |
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| Heavy metals | Total and available Cd 50 and 4.05 mg kg–1; total and available Pb 680 and 9.08 mg kg–1 | 0, 0.2, 0.4, and 0.8 mmol L–1 | Quail bush ( | JA enhanced phytoextraction efficiency and plant growth, antioxidant enzyme activities (e.g., APX, PPO), phenolic compounds, and the synthesis of osmoregulatory compounds (e.g., soluble carbohydrates and proline) |
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| Heavy metals | 50 μM Cd, 45 days | 0.5 mM | Pea ( | JA improved stress tolerance, enzymatic activities (e.g., NRA, NiRA, SOD, POD, and CAT), and Chl |
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| Heavy metals | 0, 100, 200, and 400 μM Ni | 0, 5, and 10 μM | Sweet alyssum ( | JA ameliorated root biomass and plant tolerance by restricting Ni translocation to shoots, accumulating in roots, and increasing antioxidant defense systems |
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| Salinity | NaCl at 0, 100, 200, 300 and 400 mM L–1 | 1.0 mM L–1 | Rice ( | SA reduced the harmful effects of salinity by modulating the activities of antioxidant systems; SOD, CAT, and POX increased under salt stress and decreased with SA application |
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| Drought | 70% FWC; 6 days | 10 or 100 μM | Wheat ( | SA treatment improved stress tolerance, SOD, CAT, and GPX activities, and proline content |
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| Salinity | NaCl 50, 100, and 150 mM; 9 weeks | 0.5 mM | Mustard ( | Foliar SA supplementation reduced the salinity effect and improved the efficiency of SOD (29–32%), CAT (27–25%), and POX (179–194%) |
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| Cold | 4°C; 2 or 4 days | 3 mM AsA | Common bean ( | Exogenous AsA reduced the damaging effect of stress and improved APX, SOD, POD, and CAT activities |
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| Heat | 42°C; 36 h | 1 mM | Tomato ( | Increased activities of SOD (36.6%), POD (136.3%), CAT (250%), and APX (65.8%), decreasing oxidative injury |
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| Artificial magnetism | 250 ppm, 20 days | 250 μM SA | Pea ( | SA improved various growth attributes, photosynthetic pigments (Chl |
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| Heavy metals | 500 μM Cd, 15 days | 0.25 μM | Milk thistle ( | SA application improved growth attributes (root/shoot length, leaf area, and root/shoot fresh and dry weights), photosynthetic pigments (Chl |
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| Salinity | 10, 35, and 70 mM NaCl | 0, 0.25, 0.50, and 1 mM | Pomegranate ( | SA application improved chlorophyll, total phenolic, carbohydrate, and proline contents and POD and CAT activities and decreased MDA content, electrolyte leakage (EL), Na, and Cl levels |
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| Salinity | 100, 200, and 300 mmol L–1 NaCl solution | 0, 0.2, 0.4, 0.6, 0.8, and 1.0 mmol L–1 | Soapwort ( | SA improved salt tolerance capacity by modulating photosynthetic rate, osmoprotectants, antioxidant levels, and ion homeostasis |
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| Salinity | NaCl 100 and 150 mM; 3 weeks | 0, 0.5, 1.5, and 2.5 mg L–1 | Peppermint ( | BR-treated plants had improved stress tolerance and SOD, CAT, and APX activities |
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| Water deficit | 18–20 days after start of experiment | 0, 50, and 100 nM EBR | Cowpea ( | EBR reduced cell damage and increased stress tolerance by increasing the activities of SOD (25%), CAT (29%), APX (50%), and POX (149%) and PSII efficiency |
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| Cold | 4°C; 3 days | 0.1 μM | Tomato ( | Endogenous BRs increased chilling tolerance and APX, MDAR, DHAR, and GR activities |
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| Cold | 4°C; 1, 3, 6, 12, 24, 72, and 120 h | 0, 0.01, 0.1, 1, 10, and 10 μM | BRs improved cold tolerance and enhanced CAT, APX, GR, DHAR, and MDAR activities |
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| Drought | Suppressing 100% water needs at 30–37 and 73–80 days after transplanting | 0, 1, 2, 4, or 8 ml | Naranjilla ( | Foliar DI-31 (BRs) sprays enhanced leaf photosynthesis and photosynthetic pigment concentrations and reduced MDA |
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| Heavy metals | 400 μM Al | 0.01 μM | Rice ( | BRs alleviated Al injury by lowering MDA and H2O2 levels and increasing antioxidant activities and photosynthetic pigments |
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| Salinity and heavy metal | 160 mM NaCl and 250 μM CdCl2; 24–48 h in 7-day-old seedlings | 100 μM IAA-Asp | Pea ( | IAA improved stress tolerance by regulating APX, GPX, and POX activities; no effect on CAT activity |
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| Heavy metal | 1, 3, 6, 9, 12, and 15 mg Cd kg–1 soil (after 15 days of growth) | 10 μM and 100 μM | Fenugreek ( | IAA supplementation increased AsA-GSH cycle, reduced cell damage, and increased the activities of different antioxidant defense enzymes such as SOD, CAT, GSH, POD, GST, APX, DHA, DHAR, and GR |
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| Salinity | 3, 4, 5 and 6 dS m–1 NaCl at 3 days intervals | 50 μM | Rice ( | Increased activities of AsA, ASO, α-tocopherol under salt stress |
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| Drought | Withholding water for 3 weeks | 80 ppm | Wheat ( | IAA improved plant health under stress and increased activities of SOD (33%, 15.26%, and 38%) and POD (90%, 77%, and 82%) |
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| Salinity | NaCl 120 mM; 2 weeks | 12.5, 25, and 50 ppm | Sunflower ( | IAA improved stress tolerance and the activities of CAT (152.24% and 350.64%) and PPO (110.14% and 100.82%) under salinity |
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| Salinity | 80 mM NaCl | 2 mM IAA | Eggplant ( | Foliar IAA sprays ameliorated the salinity effects on biomass production, biochemical, physiological, and yield attributes |
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| Heavy metals | 30 mg kg–1 Cd-spiked soil | 10-mg kg–1 IAA | Perennial ryegrass ( | IAA alleviated Cd stress and increased biomass, Chl content, SOD activity, sucrose activity, fluorescein diacetate (FDA) hydrolase activity, and Cd removal rate by 14.5%, 19.9%, 24.3%, 12.1%, 20.4%, and 15.1%, respectively |
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| Drought | Water equivalent to 50% evapotranspiration (ET) during 1–19 days, 40% ET during 20–32 days, and 20–30% ET during 32–40 days | 10 and 100 μM | Creeping bentgrass ( | Foliar supplementation of CKs improved stress tolerance and enhanced the activities of SOD (25%), APX (22%), CAT (17%, and POD (24%) |
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| Heavy metal | 100 μM | 0.01, 0.1, and 1 μM 100 μM DPU Pb supplied on day 3, 5, and 7 of algal cultivation | CK treatment enhanced the activities of AsA (41%), GSH (76%), SOD (76%), CAT (41%), GR (110%), APX (43%), and proline (126%) under Pb toxicity and improved plant adaptation to Pb |
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| Drought and high temperature | 20% PEG, and 37 ± 2°C; 10 days | 10 ppm BAP | Wheat ( | Reduced the harmful impact of combined stress and improved CAT, APX, and proline activities |
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| Salinity | 0, 75 or 150 mM NaCl | 50 or 40 μM | Maize ( |
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| Drought | 40 and 120 mm evaporation | 20 μM CK and 20 μM ABA | Wheat ( | Foliar-applied CK alleviated drought stress and increased K+, Ca2+, Mg2+, Fe2+, and Zn2+, but decreased Na+ |
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| Salinity | 100 mM NaCl; 10 days | 0.1 mM | Okra ( | Foliar application of GA3 reduced the adverse effects of NaCl stress, enhanced the activities of SOD, CAT, and POD, and reduced EL, MDA, and H2O2 contents |
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| Salinity | 100 mM NaCl every 4 to 20 days | 1.4 μM | Tomato ( | GA3 decreased oxidative stress by increasing the activities of CAT (49.7), APX (45.4%), GR (152.0%), DHAR (39.2%), MDHAR (98.1%), and GPX (63.2%), enhancing Chl contents, and decreasing the over-generation of ROS and glycolate oxidase activity |
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| Cerium oxide nanoparticles (CeO2-NPs) | 100, 200, 300, 400, and 600 mg kg–1 | 100 and 200 mg L–1 | Wheat ( | Foliar spray of GA increased plant growth, Chl and nutrient contents, and yield, and decreased oxidative stress by increasing CAT, SOD, APX, and POD activities |
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| Heat | 44°C; 30 days | 100 μM | Date palm ( | GA3-mediated oxidative stress decreases with decreasing MDA and superoxide anions and increasing CAT, POD, APX, and polyphenol oxidase activities |
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| Salinity | 100 mM NaCl for 41 days | 0.1 mM | Papaya ( | GA3 acted as a growth regulator and osmoregulatory solute and increased adaptation against salt stress by increasing stomatal conductance, plant biomass, and stem height |
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| Salinity | 0 and 5 dS m–1 Na stress | 10–4 M for 12 h | Pea ( | GA3 alleviated salt stress and increased plant biomass and yield, Chl content, antioxidant enzyme activity, and soluble protein content, and reduced Na+ transport |
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| Salinity | 100 and 200 mM NaCl; 7 days | 0.18 μM GR24 | Rapeseed ( | SLs increased canola growth and photosynthesis and reduced oxidative stress by modulating POD and SOD activities and decreasing MDA content |
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| Drought | PEG-6000; 2, 12, 24, 72, 96, and 120 h | 1, 3, and 5 μM GR24 | Common grape vine ( | SLs improved drought tolerance by decreasing EL, ROS, MDA, and Chl contents and increasing SOD activity (105 and 90%) |
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| Drought | 40% water holding capacity | 10 and 20 μM | Maize ( | SLs improved plant growth by improving gas exchange parameters, water relations, and Chl pigments |
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| Salinity | 150 mM NaCl | 15 μM | Tomato ( | SLs participated in NO-enhanced salinity tolerance in tomato seedlings by increasing photosynthetic pigment content, enhancing antioxidant capacity, and improving endogenous SLs synthesis |
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| Heavy metals | 100 mg kg–1 soil Cu | 200 μL L–1 ethephon | Mustard ( | Ethylene mitigated the negative effect of Cu and decreased Cu accumulation, lowering lipid peroxidation, lignin accumulation, and ROS content |
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FIGURE 5Schematic for improving phytohormone-mediated antioxidant defense via genetic and metabolic engineering using a modern gene-editing tool such as clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats-CRISPR-associated proteins (CRISPR/Cas). Targeted engineering to activate or repress biosynthesis and enzyme-encoding genes can help enhance abiotic-stress-induced oxidative stress in plants by improving the activity of antioxidant defense systems. The genes within the boxes are based on the literature cited in the main text.
FIGURE 6Possible mechanisms for the interaction of neurotransmitters and phytohormones and their roles in several physiological processes. Phytohormones and NTs coordinate as growth regulators, antioxidant activators, redox state managers, and oxidative stress reducers, improving plant growth and enhancing multiple stress tolerances. The illustration presents a series of physiological and biochemical mechanisms linked to the interaction of five NTs with different plant growth regulators. The solid and dashed lines indicate strong and weak interaction, respectively. Lines with bars show the inhibition of a physiological process by NTs. During this process, GABA accumulates rapidly in response to several abiotic stresses. GABA, γ-aminobutyric acid; ABA, abscisic acid; GAs, gibberellic acids; IAA, indole-3-acetic acid; SA, salicylic acid; BRs, brassinosteroids; JS, jasmonic acid; CKs, cytokines; GAs, gibberellic acids; SLs, strigolactones; ET, ethylene; SOD, superoxide dismutase, CAT, catalase; POD, peroxidase; AsA-GSH, ascorbate-glutathione; H2O2, hydrogen peroxide; 1O2, singlet oxygen; , superoxide; OH, hydroxyl radical; MDA, malondialdehyde; GB, glycine betaine; Pas, polyamines; UPB1; UPBEAT1 transcription factor; Glu, glutamate; 2-OG, 2-oxoglutarate; TCAs, tricarboxylic acid cycle; SSA, succinic semialdehyde; Succ, succinate.
FIGURE 7Physiological role of neurotransmitters (NTs) associated with plant growth and stress tolerance in plants. NTs coordinate the regulation of plant growth, development, and adaptation/acclimatization, increasing plant stress tolerance. Up/down arrows indicate the increase/decrease of a physiological parameter. GABA, γ-aminobutyric acid; AsA-GSH, ascorbate-glutathione cycle.