Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Query: UNIPROT:P04040 (
Catalase
)
3,577
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Silicon (Si) may be involved in metabolic, physiological, and/or structural activity in higher plants exposed to abiotic and biotic stresses. This has not yet been determined due to the absence of direct evidence that it is part of the molecule of an essential plant constituent or metabolite. The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of silicon on soybean seedlings under drought and ultraviolet-B (UV-B) radiation stresses. The relative leaf water content (RWC), which was the main factor resulting in reduced growth in response to drought, increased 19.0% and 30.0% with Si application under drought and drought+UV-B stresses, respectively. Under UV-B radiation, the anthocyanin and phenol levels decreased 91.5% and 10.0% in the treatment of Si. Ultraviolet-B radiation and drought stress caused great membrane damage, as assessed by lipid peroxidation and osmolyte leakage, but Si application significantly reduced the membrane damage.
Catalase
(
CAT
), peroxidase (POD), superoxide dismutase (SOD) and hydrogen peroxide were observed under stress conditions.
Proline
increased primarily in drought-stressed seedlings and may be the drought-induced factor with a protective role in response to UV-B and silicon. Photosynthesis (P(N)) increased following Si application by 21.0%, 18.3% and 21.5% under UV-B radiation, drought and the combination, respectively. The physiological and biochemical parameters measured indicated that the UV-B light had more adverse effects on growth of soybean seedlings than drought, but the data also showed that Si could alleviate seedling damage under these stress conditions.
...
PMID:Silicon effects on photosynthesis and antioxidant parameters of soybean seedlings under drought and ultraviolet-B radiation. 2071 50
Plant exposure to abiotic stresses leads to an accumulation of reactive oxygen species with the concomitant increase in antioxidant defense mechanisms. Previous studies showed that exogenous application of proline mitigate the deleterious effects caused by oxidative stress due to its ability to increase the activity of antioxidant enzymes. However, there are no reports of the effects of high endogenous accumulation of proline in the transcriptional pattern of antioxidant enzymes genes under normal conditions of water supply or in response to water deficit. Here, we show that isoforms of four antioxidant enzymes genes (Ascorbate peroxidase-APX,
Catalase
-CAT, Superoxide dismutase-SOD and Glutathione reductase-GR) were differentially regulated in leaves of Swingle citrumelo transgenic plants with high endogenous proline accumulation submitted to water deficits and also under normal water supply condition.
Proline
per se caused a two-fold change in the transcription activity of APX1, APXcl, CAT2 and Cu/ZnSOD2, while during water deficit proline influenced mRNAs levels in APXs and Cu/ZnSODs isoforms, MnSODmit and GRcl. This study adds new information on the role of proline during drought conditions and, more important, without the potential confounding effects imposed by water deficiency. We showed that, in addition to its known effects on diverse plant physiological and biochemical processes, high endogenous proline can also acts as a regulatory/signalling molecule capable of altering the transcript levels of stress-related genes.
...
PMID:The accumulation of endogenous proline induces changes in gene expression of several antioxidant enzymes in leaves of transgenic Swingle citrumelo. 2329 76