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      The thermal tolerance of photosynthetic tissues: a global systematic review and agenda for future research

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          Preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses: the PRISMA statement.

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            Reactive oxygen species and antioxidant machinery in abiotic stress tolerance in crop plants.

            Various abiotic stresses lead to the overproduction of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in plants which are highly reactive and toxic and cause damage to proteins, lipids, carbohydrates and DNA which ultimately results in oxidative stress. The ROS comprises both free radical (O(2)(-), superoxide radicals; OH, hydroxyl radical; HO(2), perhydroxy radical and RO, alkoxy radicals) and non-radical (molecular) forms (H(2)O(2), hydrogen peroxide and (1)O(2), singlet oxygen). In chloroplasts, photosystem I and II (PSI and PSII) are the major sites for the production of (1)O(2) and O(2)(-). In mitochondria, complex I, ubiquinone and complex III of electron transport chain (ETC) are the major sites for the generation of O(2)(-). The antioxidant defense machinery protects plants against oxidative stress damages. Plants possess very efficient enzymatic (superoxide dismutase, SOD; catalase, CAT; ascorbate peroxidase, APX; glutathione reductase, GR; monodehydroascorbate reductase, MDHAR; dehydroascorbate reductase, DHAR; glutathione peroxidase, GPX; guaicol peroxidase, GOPX and glutathione-S- transferase, GST) and non-enzymatic (ascorbic acid, ASH; glutathione, GSH; phenolic compounds, alkaloids, non-protein amino acids and α-tocopherols) antioxidant defense systems which work in concert to control the cascades of uncontrolled oxidation and protect plant cells from oxidative damage by scavenging of ROS. ROS also influence the expression of a number of genes and therefore control the many processes like growth, cell cycle, programmed cell death (PCD), abiotic stress responses, pathogen defense, systemic signaling and development. In this review, we describe the biochemistry of ROS and their production sites, and ROS scavenging antioxidant defense machinery. Copyright © 2010 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.
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              Heat-shock proteins, molecular chaperones, and the stress response: evolutionary and ecological physiology.

              Molecular chaperones, including the heat-shock proteins (Hsps), are a ubiquitous feature of cells in which these proteins cope with stress-induced denaturation of other proteins. Hsps have received the most attention in model organisms undergoing experimental stress in the laboratory, and the function of Hsps at the molecular and cellular level is becoming well understood in this context. A complementary focus is now emerging on the Hsps of both model and nonmodel organisms undergoing stress in nature, on the roles of Hsps in the stress physiology of whole multicellular eukaryotes and the tissues and organs they comprise, and on the ecological and evolutionary correlates of variation in Hsps and the genes that encode them. This focus discloses that (a) expression of Hsps can occur in nature, (b) all species have hsp genes but they vary in the patterns of their expression, (c) Hsp expression can be correlated with resistance to stress, and (d) species' thresholds for Hsp expression are correlated with levels of stress that they naturally undergo. These conclusions are now well established and may require little additional confirmation; many significant questions remain unanswered concerning both the mechanisms of Hsp-mediated stress tolerance at the organismal level and the evolutionary mechanisms that have diversified the hsp genes.
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                Author and article information

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                Journal
                New Phytologist
                New Phytol
                Wiley
                0028-646X
                1469-8137
                March 2021
                December 03 2020
                March 2021
                : 229
                : 5
                : 2497-2513
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Research School of Biology The Australian National University Canberra ACT2600Australia
                [2 ]Department of Biological Sciences University of Bergen Bergen5008Norway
                [3 ]Bjerknes Centre for Climate Research University of Bergen Bergen5008Norway
                [4 ]School of Biological Sciences The University of Queensland Brisbane Qld4072Australia
                [5 ]Natural Resources Institute University of Greenwich Central Avenue, Chatham Maritime Kent,ME4 4TBUK
                [6 ]School of Life Sciences University of Technology Sydney Broadway NSW2007Australia
                [7 ]School of Life and Environmental Sciences Deakin University Melbourne Vic.3125Australia
                Article
                10.1111/nph.17052
                33124040
                5b7415b0-e92d-4d55-915b-1ad25feefb06
                © 2021

                http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/termsAndConditions#vor

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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