2007
DOI: 10.1104/pp.107.107250
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Cell Wall Proteome in the Maize Primary Root Elongation Zone. II. Region-Specific Changes in Water Soluble and Lightly Ionically Bound Proteins under Water Deficit

Abstract: Previous work on the adaptation of maize (Zea mays) primary roots to water deficit showed that cell elongation is maintained preferentially toward the apex, and that this response involves modification of cell wall extension properties. To gain a comprehensive understanding of how cell wall protein (CWP) composition changes in association with the differential growth responses to water deficit in different regions of the elongation zone, a proteomics approach was used to examine water soluble and loosely ionic… Show more

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Cited by 193 publications
(209 citation statements)
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References 77 publications
(81 reference statements)
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“…However, the turgor pressure along the elongation zone was equally reduced in both well-watered and water deficit-stressed conditions, suggesting that cell wall extensibility is the major factor in the regulation of root cell growth (Spollen and Sharp, 1991;Zhu et al, 2007). In water-stressed roots, a reduced pH was detected in the apical region (Wu et al, 1996;Fan and Neumann, 2004;Fan et al, 2006;Zhu et al, 2007). The acidic pH could be responsible for the acid-induced extensibility that maintains the cell growth rate.…”
Section: Reprps Are Involved In the Regulation Of Cell Expansionmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…However, the turgor pressure along the elongation zone was equally reduced in both well-watered and water deficit-stressed conditions, suggesting that cell wall extensibility is the major factor in the regulation of root cell growth (Spollen and Sharp, 1991;Zhu et al, 2007). In water-stressed roots, a reduced pH was detected in the apical region (Wu et al, 1996;Fan and Neumann, 2004;Fan et al, 2006;Zhu et al, 2007). The acidic pH could be responsible for the acid-induced extensibility that maintains the cell growth rate.…”
Section: Reprps Are Involved In the Regulation Of Cell Expansionmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…Many tolerance mechanisms have been evolved, some of which are; dehydration tolerance level using genetic engineering techniques under laboratory condition (Jenks et al ,2007;Nelson et al, 2007), reactive oxygen species detoxification under stress condition (Lee et al 2007;Yang et al, 2007;Zhu et al, 2007) and facilitating the drought avoidance mechanism with hormonal balance (Rivero et al 2007). …”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, some studies also suggest that the correlation between expansin activity and growth does not always hold (Caderas et al, 2000;Reidy et al, 2001). Expansins are strongly regulated during plant responses to environmental stresses, such as drought (Jones and McQueen-Mason, 2004;Zhu et al, 2007), flooding (Cho and Kende, 1997;Colmer et al, 2004;Vreeburg et al, 2005), and response to pathogens (Ding et al, 2008;Fudali et al, 2008).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%