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Hydrogen sulphide as a guard cell network regulator

Rosario Pantaleno, Denise Scuffi, Carlos García‐Mata

2020New Phytologist50 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Summary Hydrogen sulphide (H 2 S) is an endogenously produced gasotransmitter that has rapidly emerged as an active signalling component of several plant processes, stomatal movement regulation among them. The guard cells (GCs), pairs of cells that neighbour the stomatal pores, transduce endogenous and environmental signals, through signalling network, to control stomatal pore size. In this complex network, which has become a model system for plant signalling, few highly connected components form a core that links most of the pathways. The evidence summarized in this insight, on the interplay between H 2 S and different key components of the GC networks, points towards H 2 S as a regulator of the GC core signalling pathway.

Topics & Concepts

RegulatorGuard cellHydrogen sulphideHydrogenChemistryGuard (computer science)Environmental scienceCell biologyBusinessComputer scienceBiologyBiochemistrySulfurGeneOrganic chemistryProgramming languageSulfur Compounds in BiologyRedox biology and oxidative stressPolyamine Metabolism and Applications