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Understanding molecular mechanism of higher plant plasticity under abiotic stress

Authors :
Qing-Jie Guo
Xi-Ning Zhao
Li-Ye Chu
Ya-Chen Hu
Hongbo Shao
Zhong-Liang Su
Jiang-Feng Cheng
Source :
Colloids and Surfaces B: Biointerfaces. 54:37-45
Publication Year :
2007
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2007.

Abstract

Higher plants play the most important role in keeping a stable environment on the earth, which regulate global circumstances in many ways in terms of different levels (molecular, individual, community, and so on), but the nature of the mechanism is gene expression and control temporally and spatially at the molecular level. In persistently changing environment, there are many adverse stress conditions such as cold, drought, salinity and UV-B (280-320 mm), which influence plant growth and crop production greatly. Plants differ from animals in many aspects, but the important may be that plants are more easily influenced by environment than animals. Plants have a series of fine mechanisms for responding to environmental changes, which has been established during their long-period evolution and artificial domestication. These mechanisms are involved in many aspects of anatomy, physiology, biochemistry, genetics, development, evolution and molecular biology, in which the adaptive machinery related to molecular biology is the most important. The elucidation of it will extremely and purposefully promote the sustainable utilization of plant resources and make the best use of its current potential under different scales. This molecular mechanism at least include environmental signal recognition (input), signal transduction (many cascade biochemical reactions are involved in this process), signal output, signal responses and phenotype realization, which is a multi-dimensional network system and contain many levels of gene expression and regulation. We will focus on the molecular adaptive machinery of higher plant plasticity under abiotic stresses.

Details

ISSN :
09277765
Volume :
54
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Colloids and Surfaces B: Biointerfaces
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....133fb3f6f1a03553dcc0f48fe41130e1
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.colsurfb.2006.07.002