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Accumulation of unfolded protein or misfolded protein causes endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress. Increased salt concentration activates a stress response pathway in the ER in Arabidopsis thaliana to induce the expression of several salt stress response genes, leading to a more optimal protein folding environment in the ER. In addition, some salt stress-regulated proteins require zinc for their activity, including some zinc-dependent DNA binding proteins and zinc-finger proteins. In a recent study, we reported that ZTP29, a putative zinc transporter at the ER membrane, is involved in the response to salt stress through regulation of zinc level in the ER to induce the UPR pathway. In this addendum, we propose a testable hypothesis for the role of ZTP29 in the response to salt stress via the regulation of zinc levels in the ER.Key words: zinc, ER stress, unfolded protein response, salt stress, arabidopsisHigh salinity is a common abiotic stress that adversely affects plant growth and crop production.1 Plants must sense the stress and transduce stress signals to activate response pathways leading to adaptation to, or tolerance of, the abiotic stress in salt environment.2 Salt stress activates a stress response pathway in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) in Arabidopsis thaliana, indicating that the adaptation of plants to salt stress involves ER stress signal regulation.3,4 There is limited understanding of molecular mechanisms on ER stress in plants, as compared to yeast and mammalian cells. bZIP60, bZIP28, bZIP17 are three membrane-associated basic domain/leucine zipper (bZIP) factors, which have been reported as candidates for ER-folding proteins in plants.5–7 BiP acts as a general chaperone in the ER lumen, due to its ability to discriminate between properly folded and unfolded protein structures.8 Unfolded or misfolded proteins are retained in the ER and form stable complexes with BiP and other ER resident chaperones.9 Zinc deficiency induces unfolded protein response (UPR) in most eukaryotes.10 Zinc is an important trace element, which participates in physiological and biochemical process in vivo. The requirement of zinc for proper ER function is evolutionarily conserved. 相似文献
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Campestre MP Bordenave CD Origone AC Menéndez AB Ruiz OA Rodríguez AA Maiale SJ 《Journal of plant physiology》2011,168(11):1234-1240
The possible relationship between polyamine catabolism mediated by copper-containing amine oxidase and the elongation of soybean hypocotyls from plants exposed to NaCl has been studied. Salt treatment reduced values of all hypocotyl growth parameters. In vitro, copper-containing amine oxidase activity was up to 77-fold higher than that of polyamine oxidase. This enzyme preferred cadaverine over putrescine and it was active even under the saline condition. On the other hand, saline stress increased spermine and cadaverine levels, and the in vivo copper-containing amine oxidase activity in the elongation zone of hypocotyls. The last effect was negatively modulated by the addition of the copper-containing amine oxidase inhibitor N,N'-diaminoguanidine. In turn, plants treated with the inhibitor showed a significant reduction of reactive oxygen species in the elongation zone, even in the saline situation. In addition, plants grown in cadaverine-amended culture medium showed increased hypocotyl length either in saline or control conditions and this effect was also abolished by N,N'-diaminoguanidine. Taken together, our results suggest that the activity of the copper-containing amine oxidase may be partially contributing to hypocotyl growth under saline stress, through the production of hydrogen peroxide by polyamine catabolism and reinforce the importance of polyamine catabolism and hydrogen peroxide production in the induction of salt tolerance in plants. 相似文献
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The tomato mutant ars1 (altered response to salt stress 1) identifies an R1‐type MYB transcription factor involved in stomatal closure under salt acclimation 下载免费PDF全文
Juan F. Campos Beatriz Cara Fernando Pérez‐Martín Benito Pineda Isabel Egea Francisco B. Flores Nieves Fernandez‐Garcia Juan Capel Vicente Moreno Trinidad Angosto Rafael Lozano Maria C. Bolarin 《Plant biotechnology journal》2016,14(6):1345-1356
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Soo Young Kim 《Physiologia plantarum》2006,126(4):519-527
Adverse environmental conditions, such as drought, high salinity and chilling/freezing, are major limiting factors of crop productivity worldwide. According to Boyer [Science 1982;218:443–448], approximately 70% of the genetic potential yield of major crops is lost by these environmental factors. Thus, understanding how plants respond to the 'abiotic stresses' is of agronomic importance. Being sessile, plants have the capability to perceive and respond adaptively to various abiotic stresses. The adaptive capability of plants is largely dependent on the plant hormone abscisic acid (ABA), which regulates, among others, the expression of numerous genes involved in stress adaptation. Extensive genetic and molecular studies have been carried out during the last decade or so, and, as a result, a large body of information is available on the regulatory components of ABA-responsive gene expression under stress conditions. In this article, recent advances in the area are summarized, focusing on the regulatory components of ABA-dependent stress-responsive gene expression. 相似文献