Gábor Fejes, Tamás Bodor, Réka Szőllősi, Selahattin Kondak, Kinga Kutasi, Vasileios Fotopoulos, Zsuzsanna Kolbert
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The beneficial effects of priming technology are aimed at the promotion of growth and development and stress tolerance in plants. Different seed pre-treatment and vegetative priming approaches (osmo-, chemical, physical, hormonal, redox treatments) increase the level of nitric oxide (NO) being an active contributor to growth regulation and defence responses. On the other hand, seed pre-treatment or vegetative priming mainly with the NO donor, sodium nitroprusside (SNP) helps to mitigate different abiotic stresses like salinity, cold, drought, excess metals. The effect of SNP/NO covers the alleviation of stress-specific effects (e.g. reduction of cadmium uptake in case of cadmium loading, improvement of water balance in case of drought), as well as general effects, such as alleviating oxidative stress. Seed pre-treatment or vegetative priming with SNP/NO up-regulates antioxidant enzymes at the activity level and increases the amount of a wide range of non-enzymatic antioxidants. However, due to adverse effects of SNP we urge the testing of other conventional NO donors (e.g. S-nitrosoglutathione) as well as new substances with more favourable properties (e.g. NO-releasing nanomaterials, plasmas, plasma treated liquids, combined donors) as seed pre-treating and vegetative priming materials. This review gives further suggestions on the methodology and future directions of fundamental research in relation to NO-associated pre-treatment and priming.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Experimental Botany publishes high-quality primary research and review papers in the plant sciences. These papers cover a range of disciplines from molecular and cellular physiology and biochemistry through whole plant physiology to community physiology.
Full-length primary papers should contribute to our understanding of how plants develop and function, and should provide new insights into biological processes. The journal will not publish purely descriptive papers or papers that report a well-known process in a species in which the process has not been identified previously. Articles should be concise and generally limited to 10 printed pages.