AbdElgawad Hamada, Zinta Gaurav, Beemster Gerrit T S, Janssens Ivan A, Asard Han
Integrated Molecular Plant Physiology Research, Department of Biology, University of AntwerpAntwerp, Belgium; Faculty of Science, Department of Botany, University of Beni-SuefBeni-Suef, Egypt.
Integrated Molecular Plant Physiology Research, Department of Biology, University of AntwerpAntwerp, Belgium; Centre of Excellence Plant and Vegetation Ecology, Department of Biology, University of AntwerpAntwerp, Belgium.
Front Plant Sci. 2016 May 2;7:556. doi: 10.3389/fpls.2016.00556. eCollection 2016.
Elevated atmospheric CO2 can stimulate plant growth by providing additional C (fertilization effect), and is observed to mitigate abiotic stress impact. Although, the mechanisms underlying the stress mitigating effect are not yet clear, increased antioxidant defenses, have been held primarily responsible (antioxidant hypothesis). A systematic literature analysis, including "all" papers [Web of Science (WoS)-cited], addressing elevated CO2 effects on abiotic stress responses and antioxidants (105 papers), confirms the frequent occurrence of the stress mitigation effect. However, it also demonstrates that, in stress conditions, elevated CO2 is reported to increase antioxidants, only in about 22% of the observations (e.g., for polyphenols, peroxidases, superoxide dismutase, monodehydroascorbate reductase). In most observations, under stress and elevated CO2 the levels of key antioxidants and antioxidant enzymes are reported to remain unchanged (50%, e.g., ascorbate peroxidase, catalase, ascorbate), or even decreased (28%, e.g., glutathione peroxidase). Moreover, increases in antioxidants are not specific for a species group, growth facility, or stress type. It seems therefore unlikely that increased antioxidant defense is the major mechanism underlying CO2-mediated stress impact mitigation. Alternative processes, probably decreasing the oxidative challenge by reducing ROS production (e.g., photorespiration), are therefore likely to play important roles in elevated CO2 (relaxation hypothesis). Such parameters are however rarely investigated in connection with abiotic stress relief. Understanding the effect of elevated CO2 on plant growth and stress responses is imperative to understand the impact of climate changes on plant productivity.
大气中二氧化碳浓度升高可通过提供额外的碳(施肥效应)来刺激植物生长,并被观察到能减轻非生物胁迫的影响。尽管胁迫缓解效应背后的机制尚不清楚,但抗氧化防御能力的增强一直被认为是主要原因(抗氧化假说)。一项系统的文献分析,包括“所有”被《科学引文索引》(WoS)引用的论文,探讨了二氧化碳浓度升高对非生物胁迫响应和抗氧化剂的影响(共105篇论文),证实了胁迫缓解效应的频繁出现。然而,该分析也表明,在胁迫条件下,只有约22%的观察结果显示二氧化碳浓度升高会增加抗氧化剂(例如多酚、过氧化物酶、超氧化物歧化酶、单脱氢抗坏血酸还原酶)。在大多数观察结果中,在胁迫和二氧化碳浓度升高的情况下,关键抗氧化剂和抗氧化酶的水平据报道保持不变(50%,例如抗坏血酸过氧化物酶、过氧化氢酶、抗坏血酸),甚至下降(28%,例如谷胱甘肽过氧化物酶)。此外,抗氧化剂的增加并非特定于某一物种组、生长设施或胁迫类型。因此,抗氧化防御能力增强似乎不太可能是二氧化碳介导的胁迫影响缓解的主要机制。因此,可能通过减少活性氧产生(例如光呼吸)来降低氧化应激的其他过程,在二氧化碳浓度升高时可能发挥重要作用(缓解假说)。然而,这些参数很少与非生物胁迫缓解相关联进行研究。了解二氧化碳浓度升高对植物生长和胁迫响应的影响对于理解气候变化对植物生产力的影响至关重要。