High Nighttime Temperature Induces Antioxidant Molecule
Perturbations in Heat-Sensitive and Heat-Tolerant Coisogenic Rice
(Oryza sativa) Strains
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Version 1 2018-11-02, 18:06Version 1 2018-11-02, 18:06
Posted on 2018-11-12 - 14:05
Global
warming-associated increases in temperature, particularly
at nighttime, are detrimental to rice yield and quality. Metabolomic
profiling was used to examine and compare the short-term extreme high
nighttime temperature-induced molecular perturbations in rice (Oryza sativa) coisogenic strains with contrasting heat-tolerances
at the first stage of seed ripening. Compared to the heat-sensitive
strain, antioxidant molecules were higher in abundance in the heat-tolerant
strain, whereas the abundances of molecules involved in photosynthesis,
nucleotide catabolism, and the S-adenosylmethionine (SAM) cycle varied
only slightly. Thus, we proposed that the high abundance of antioxidant
molecules in the heat-tolerant strain alleviated cellular oxidative
stress, which protected photosynthesis, nucleotide catabolism, and
the SAM cycle, leading to good grain filling.
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Lei, Gang; Zhang, Hong-Yu; Wang, Zhao-Hai; Wei, Ling-Xia; Fu, Pei; Song, Jian-Bo; et al. (2018). High Nighttime Temperature Induces Antioxidant Molecule
Perturbations in Heat-Sensitive and Heat-Tolerant Coisogenic Rice
(Oryza sativa) Strains. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jafc.8b04425Â