Back to Search
ReviewUnknown

Superoxide dismutase—mentor of abiotic stress tolerance in crop plants

Author Affiliations
Maharshi Dayanand University, University of Aveiro, International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology, Sher-e-Bangla Agricultural University, ...
Published InEnvironmental Science and Pollution Research
Year2015
Citations381

Abstract

Abiotic stresses impact growth, development, and productivity, and significantly limit the global agricultural productivity mainly by impairing cellular physiology/biochemistry via elevating reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation. If not metabolized, ROS (such as O2 (•-), OH(•), H2O2, or (1)O2) exceeds the status of antioxidants and cause damage to DNA, proteins, lipids, and other macromolecules, and finally cellular metabolism arrest. Plants are endowed with a family of enzymes called superoxide dismutases (SODs) that protects cells against potential consequences caused by cytotoxic O2 (•-) by catalyzing its conversion to O2 and H2O2. Hence, SODs constitute the first line of defense against abiotic stress-accrued enhanced ROS and its reaction products. In the light of recent reports, the present effort: (a) overviews abiotic stresses, ROS,…
View at Publisher

BORR does not host full-text PDFs. The button above takes you to the original publisher.