Reactive oxygen species as signals that modulate plant stress responses and programmed cell death
ETH Zurich · Institute of Plant Biology · +4 more institutions
Abstract
Reactive oxygen species (ROS) are known as toxic metabolic products in plants and other aerobic organisms. An elaborate and highly redundant plant ROS network, composed of antioxidant enzymes, antioxidants and ROS-producing enzymes, is responsible for maintaining ROS levels under tight control. This allows ROS to serve as signaling molecules that coordinate an astonishing range of diverse plant processes. The specificity of the biological response to ROS depends on the chemical identity of ROS, intensity of the signal, sites of production, plant developmental stage, previous stresses encountered and interactions with other signaling molecules such as nitric oxide, lipid messengers and plant hormones. Although…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 38.27
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 102
Authors
5- TGTsanko GechevCorresponding
ETH Zurich, Institute of Plant Biology, Center of Plant Systems Biology and Biotechnology
- FVFrank Van Breusegem
Ghent University, Vlaams Instituut voor Biotechnologie
- JMJulie M. Stone
University of Nebraska–Lincoln
- IDIliya Denev
Center of Plant Systems Biology and Biotechnology
- CLChristophe Laloi
ETH Zurich
Topics & keywords
- Reactive oxygen species
- Cell biology
- Biology
- Signal transduction
- Programmed cell death
- Cell signaling
- Antioxidant
- Oxidative stress
- Life in Land