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Plant Copper Amine Oxidases: Key Players in Hormone Signaling Leading to Stress-Induced Phenotypic Plasticity

Ilaria Fraudentali, Renato A. Rodrigues-Pousada, Riccardo Angelini, Sandip A. Ghuge, Alessandra Cona

2021International Journal of Molecular Sciences45 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Polyamines are ubiquitous, low-molecular-weight aliphatic compounds, present in living organisms and essential for cell growth and differentiation. Copper amine oxidases (CuAOs) oxidize polyamines to aminoaldehydes releasing ammonium and hydrogen peroxide, which participates in the complex network of reactive oxygen species acting as signaling molecules involved in responses to biotic and abiotic stresses. CuAOs have been identified and characterized in different plant species, but the most extensive study on a CuAO gene family has been carried out in Arabidopsis thaliana. Growing attention has been devoted in the last years to the investigation of the CuAO expression pattern during development and in response to an array of stress and stress-related hormones, events in which recent studies have highlighted CuAOs to play a key role by modulation of a multilevel phenotypic plasticity expression. In this review, the attention will be focused on the involvement of different AtCuAOs in the IAA/JA/ABA signal transduction pathways which mediate stress-induced phenotypic plasticity events.

Topics & Concepts

Phenotypic plasticityBiologyAbiotic stressReactive oxygen speciesArabidopsis thalianaSignal transductionPhenotypeAbiotic componentOrganismCell biologyBiochemistryGeneGeneticsEcologyMutantPolyamine Metabolism and ApplicationsPlant Stress Responses and ToleranceMicrobial metabolism and enzyme function
Plant Copper Amine Oxidases: Key Players in Hormone Signaling Leading to Stress-Induced Phenotypic Plasticity | Litcius