Involvement of soluble sugars in reactive oxygen species balance and responses to oxidative stress in plants
Ecosystèmes, Biodiversité, Evolution · Université de Rennes
Abstract
Soluble sugars, especially sucrose, glucose, and fructose, play an obviously central role in plant structure and metabolism at the cellular and whole-organism levels. They are involved in the responses to a number of stresses, and they act as nutrient and metabolite signalling molecules that activate specific or hormone-crosstalk transduction pathways, thus resulting in important modifications of gene expression and proteomic patterns. Various metabolic reactions and regulations directly link soluble sugars with the production rates of reactive oxygen species, such as mitochondrial respiration or photosynthesis regulation, and, conversely, with anti-oxidative processes, such as the oxidative pentose-phosphate…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 23.29
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 109
Authors
4- ICIvan CouéeCorresponding
Ecosystèmes, Biodiversité, Evolution, Université de Rennes
- CSCécile Sulmon
Ecosystèmes, Biodiversité, Evolution, Université de Rennes
- GGGwenola Gouesbet
Ecosystèmes, Biodiversité, Evolution, Université de Rennes
- AEAbdelhak El Amrani
Ecosystèmes, Biodiversité, Evolution, Université de Rennes
Topics & keywords
- Reactive oxygen species
- Biochemistry
- Pentose phosphate pathway
- Oxidative stress
- Fructose
- Oxidative phosphorylation
- Sucrose
- Sugar