Martí-Guillén José M, Pardo-Hernández Miriam, Martínez-Lorente Sara E, Almagro Lorena, Rivero Rosa M
Department of Plant Nutrition, Centro de Edafología y Biología Aplicada del Segura, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas, Murcia, Spain.
Department of Plant Biology, Faculty of Biology, University of Murcia, Murcia, Spain.
Front Plant Sci. 2022 Oct 26;13:1027730. doi: 10.3389/fpls.2022.1027730. eCollection 2022.
The impact of climate change entails a progressive and inexorable modification of the Earth's climate and events such as salinity, drought, extreme temperatures, high luminous intensity and ultraviolet radiation tend to be more numerous and prolonged in time. Plants face their exposure to these abiotic stresses or their combination through multiple physiological, metabolic and molecular mechanisms, to achieve the long-awaited acclimatization to these extreme conditions, and to thereby increase their survival rate. In recent decades, the increase in the intensity and duration of these climatological events have intensified research into the mechanisms behind plant tolerance to them, with great advances in this field. Among these mechanisms, the overproduction of molecular reactive species stands out, mainly reactive oxygen, nitrogen and sulfur species. These molecules have a dual activity, as they participate in signaling processes under physiological conditions, but, under stress conditions, their production increases, interacting with each other and modifying and-or damaging the main cellular components: lipids, carbohydrates, nucleic acids and proteins. The latter have amino acids in their sequence that are susceptible to post-translational modifications, both reversible and irreversible, through the different reactive species generated by abiotic stresses (redox-based PTMs). Some research suggests that this process does not occur randomly, but that the modification of critical residues in enzymes modulates their biological activity, being able to enhance or inhibit complete metabolic pathways in the process of acclimatization and tolerance to the exposure to the different abiotic stresses. Given the importance of these PTMs-based regulation mechanisms in the acclimatization processes of plants, the present review gathers the knowledge generated in recent years on this subject, delving into the PTMs of the redox-regulated enzymes of plant metabolism, and those that participate in the main stress-related pathways, such as oxidative metabolism, primary metabolism, cell signaling events, and photosynthetic metabolism. The aim is to unify the existing information thus far obtained to shed light on possible fields of future research in the search for the resilience of plants to climate change.
气候变化的影响必然会使地球气候逐渐且不可阻挡地发生改变,诸如盐度、干旱、极端温度、高光强度和紫外线辐射等情况在时间上往往会更加频繁且持续时间更长。植物通过多种生理、代谢和分子机制来应对这些非生物胁迫或它们的组合,以实现对这些极端条件的长期适应,并从而提高其存活率。近几十年来,这些气候事件强度和持续时间的增加加强了对植物耐受这些胁迫背后机制的研究,并在该领域取得了重大进展。在这些机制中,分子活性物质的过量产生尤为突出,主要是活性氧、氮和硫物质。这些分子具有双重活性,因为它们在生理条件下参与信号传导过程,但在胁迫条件下,它们的产生会增加,相互作用并改变和/或损害主要的细胞成分:脂质、碳水化合物、核酸和蛋白质。后者在其序列中具有氨基酸,这些氨基酸易受非生物胁迫产生的不同活性物质进行的可逆和不可逆的翻译后修饰(基于氧化还原的翻译后修饰)。一些研究表明,这个过程并非随机发生,而是酶中关键残基的修饰会调节其生物学活性,在适应和耐受不同非生物胁迫的过程中能够增强或抑制完整的代谢途径。鉴于这些基于翻译后修饰的调控机制在植物适应过程中的重要性,本综述收集了近年来在该主题上产生的知识,深入探讨了植物代谢中氧化还原调节酶的翻译后修饰,以及那些参与主要胁迫相关途径的修饰,如氧化代谢、初级代谢、细胞信号事件和光合代谢。目的是整合迄今为止获得的现有信息,以阐明未来研究可能的领域,从而探寻植物对气候变化的适应能力。