Hydrogen peroxide priming modulates abiotic oxidative stress tolerance: insights from ROS detoxification and scavenging
Bangladesh Agricultural University · University of Burdwan · +10 more institutions
Abstract
Plants are constantly challenged by various abiotic stresses that negatively affect growth and productivity worldwide. During the course of their evolution, plants have developed sophisticated mechanisms to recognize external signals allowing them to respond appropriately to environmental conditions, although the degree of adjustability or tolerance to specific stresses differs from species to species. Overproduction of reactive oxygen species (ROS; hydrogen peroxide, H2O2; superoxide, [Formula: see text]; hydroxyl radical, OH(⋅) and singlet oxygen, (1)O2) is enhanced under abiotic and/or biotic stresses, which can cause oxidative damage to plant macromolecules and cell structures, leading to inhibition of…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 72.71
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 207
Authors
9- MAMohammad Anwar HossainCorresponding
Bangladesh Agricultural University
- SBSoumen Bhattacharjee
University of Burdwan
- ASArmin Saed‐Moucheshi
Shiraz University
- PQPingping Qian
Toyo University, Osaka Prefectural Toyonaka Support School, The University of Osaka
- XWXin Wang
Lanzhou University of Technology, Lanzhou University
Topics & keywords
- Abiotic component
- Reactive oxygen species
- Abiotic stress
- Oxidative stress
- Hydrogen peroxide
- Cell biology
- Biotic stress
- Biology