Reactive oxygen species (ROS) are astonishingly versatile molecular species and radicals that are poised at the core of a sophisticated network of signaling pathways of plants and act as core regulator of cell physiology and cellular responses to environment. ROS are continuously generated in plants as an inevitable consequence of redox cascades of aerobic metabolism. In one hand, plants are surfeited with the mechanism to combat reactive oxygen species, in other circumstances, plants appear to purposefully generate (oxidative burst) and exploit ROS or ROS-induced secondary breakdown products for the regulation of almost every aspect of plant biology, from perception of environmental cues to gene expression. The molecular language associated with ROS-mediated signal transduction, leading to modulation in gene expression to be one of the specific early stress response in the acclamatory performance of the plant. They may even act as "second messenger" modulating the activities of specific proteins or expression of genes by changing redox balance of the cell. The network of redox signals orchestrates metabolism for regulating energy production to utilization, interfering with primary signaling agents (hormones) to respond to changing environmental cues at every stage of plant development. The oxidative lipid peroxidation products and the resulting generated products thereof (associated with stress and senescence) also represent "biological signals," which do not require preceding activation of genes. Unlike ROS-induced expression of genes, these lipid peroxidation products produce nonspecific response to a large variety of environmental stresses. The present review explores the specific and nonspecific signaling language of reactive oxygen species in plant acclamatory defense processes, controlled cell death, and development. Special emphasis is given to ROS and redox-regulated gene expression and the role of redox-sensitive proteins in signal transduction event. It also describes the emerging complexity of apparently contradictory roles that ROS play in cellular physiology to ascertain their position in the life of the plant.
Heat caused reduction in membrane protein thiol content, increased accumulation of thiobarbituric acid reactive substances and reduced germination rate and early growth in germinating Amaranthus lividus seeds. Imposition of heat stress during early germination also causes accumulation of reactive oxygen species like superoxide and hydrogen peroxide while activities of antioxidative enzymes catalase, ascorbate peroxidase, and glutathione reductase decreased. Calcium chelator (EGTA), calcium channel blocker (LaCl 3 ) and calmodulin inhibitor (trifluroperazine) aggravated these effects. Added calcium reversed the effect of heat, implying that protection against heat induced oxidative damage and improvement of germination requires calcium and calmodulin during the recovery phase of post-germination events in Amaranthus lividus.Additional key words: asorbate peroxidase, calmodulin, catalase, glutathione reductase, reactive oxygen species.
Extremes of temperature (both heat and chilling) during early inbibitional phase of germination caused disruption of redox-homeostasis by increasing accumulation of reactive oxygen species (superoxide and hydrogen peroxide) and significant reduction of antioxidative defense (assessed in terms of total thiol content and activities of superoxide dismutase, catalase, ascorbate peroxidase and glutathione reductase) in germinating tissues of rice (Oryza sativa L., cultivar Ratna). Imbibitional heat and chilling stress also induced oxidative damage to newly assembled membrane system by aggravating membrane lipid peroxidation and protein oxidation [measured in terms of thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (TBARS), free carbonyl content (C = O groups) and membrane protein thiol level (MPTL)]. Treatment with standardized low titer hydrogen peroxide during early imbibitional phase of germination caused significant reversal in oxidative damages to the newly assembled membrane system imposed by heat and chilling stress [evident from the data of TBARS, C = O, MPTL, ROS accumulation, membrane permeability status, membrane injury index and oxidative stress index] in seedlings of experimental rice cultivar. Imbibitional H2O2 pretreatment also caused up-regulation of antioxidative defense (activities of superoxide dismutase, catalase, ascorbate peroxidase, glutathione reductase and total thiol content) in the heat and chilling stress-raised rice seedlings. When the parameters of early growth performances were assessed (in terms of relative growth index, biomass accumulation, relative germination performance, mean daily germination, T50 value), it clearly exhibited significant improvement of early growth performances of the experimental rice cultivar. The result proposes that an 'inductive pulse' of H2O2 is required to switch on some stress acclimatory metabolism through which plant restores redox homeostasis and prevents or repairs oxidative damages to newly assembled membrane system caused by unfavorable environmental cues during early germination to the rice cultivar Ratna. The importance of mitigating oxidative damages to membrane lipid and protein necessary for post-germinative growth under extremes of temperature is also suggested.
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