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The exogenous use of the redox compound (HO) plays a significant role in abiotic stress tolerance. The present study investigated various HO application methods (seed priming, foliar spray, and surface irrigation) with varying concentration levels (0 mM, 5 mM, 10 mM, 15 mM, 40 mM, 80 mM, and 160 mM) to evaluate the efficiency of supplying exogenous HO to quinoa under water-deficit conditions. Drought stress reduced quinoa growth and yield by perturbing morphological traits, leading to the overproduction of reactive oxygen species and increased electrolyte leakage. Although all studied modes of HO application improved quinoa performance, surface irrigation was found to be sensitive, causing oxidative damage in the present study. Seed priming showed a prominent increase in plant height due to profound emergence indexes compared to other modes under drought conditions. Strikingly, seed priming followed by foliar spray improved drought tolerance in quinoa and showed higher grain yield compared to surface irrigations. This increase in the yield performance of quinoa was attributed to improvements in total chlorophyll (37%), leaf relative water content (RWC; 20%), superoxide dismutase (SOD; 35%), peroxidase (97%), polyphenol oxidase (60%), and phenylalanine ammonia-lyase (58%) activities, and the accumulation of glycine betaine (96%), total soluble protein (TSP; 17%), proline contents (35%), and the highest reduction in leaf malondialdehyde contents (MDA; 36%) under drought stress. PCA analysis indicated that physio-biochemical traits (proline, SOD, TSP, total chlorophyll, MSI, and RWC) were strongly positively correlated with grain yield, and their contribution was much higher in redox priming than other application methods. In conclusion, exogenous HO application, preferably redox priming, could be chosen to decrease drought-induced performance and yield losses in quinoa.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2024.1253677 | DOI Listing |
Toxicol Lett
September 2025
Department of Pharmacology and Clinical Pharmacology, The University of Auckland, Private Bag 92019, Auckland 1142, New Zealand. Electronic address:
Clozapine is an effective antipsychotic medication utilised for treatment-resistant schizophrenia. However, clinical use of clozapine is limited due to the risk of cardiotoxicities, including clozapine-induced myocarditis. Oxidation of clozapine and reduction of clozapine-N-oxide can be catalysed by the cardio-selective cytochrome P450 (CYP) isoforms CYP2J2, CYP1A1 and CYP1B1, which are also reported to metabolise arachidonic acid.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Exp Bot
September 2025
Université Côte d'Azur, INRAE, CNRS, ISA, 06903 Sophia Antipolis, France.
Plants must continuously adapt to their biotic and abiotic environment in order to survive, grow, and reproduce. Redox reactions play a central role in these processes, influencing numerous aspects of plant physiology, from transcriptional regulation to environmental perception, through the modulation of cellular metabolism. Redox regulation is driven by changes in the concentrations of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species (ROS/RNS), as well as antioxidants, which impact plant functioning.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurotherapeutics
August 2025
School of Molecular Biosciences, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, United Kingdom. Electronic address:
Cysteine residues occupy a unique position in the proteome: their thiolate side chain combines high nucleophilicity with redox sensitivity, making them prime targets for a diverse and ever-expanding array of post-translational modifications (PTMs). This review provides an overview of recent methodological developments for chemoselective site-specific detection and quantitation of the major cysteine PTMs-sulfenylation (RSOH), sulfinylation (RSOH), sulfonylation (RSOH), persulfidation (RSSH), S-nitrosylation (RSNO), and S-palmitoylation-emphasizing applications in brain aging and neurodegeneration. In neural tissues, these approaches have begun to map age-dependent increases in sulfenylation and sulfonylation, declines in persulfidation, and aberrant S-nitrosylation and palmitoylation linked to Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, and Huntington's disease.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAntioxidants (Basel)
August 2025
College of Agriculture, South China Agricultural University, Guangzhou 510642, China.
Cerium oxide nanoparticles (CeONPs) can boost crops' salt tolerance, yet their regulatory mechanisms in rice cultivars with contrasting salt tolerance remain unclear. This study investigated the regulatory differences in poly (acrylic acid)-coated nanoceria (PNC)-primed in salt-sensitive (Huanghuazhan, H) and salt-tolerant (Xiangliangyou900, X) rice. The results showed that PNC priming improved salt tolerance in two cultivars, but the underlying mechanisms differed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Plant Biol
August 2025
Department of Life Sciences, University of Changzhi, Changzhi, 046000, China.
Background: Metal pollution in agricultural soils is imparting devastating influence on the growth and yield of crop plants. Therefore, role of gibberellic acid (GA; 100 mg L) priming and the foliar spray of spermine (Spm; 200 µM) in mitigating the effects of mercury (Hg; 20 µM) stress on growth, photosynthesis, nitrogen metabolism and nutrient uptake were studied in tomato.
Results: Mercury (Hg) significantly reduced plant height, fresh and dry weight, chlorophylls, carotenoids and photosynthetic parameters significantly however, GA and Spm treatments alleviated the decline considerably.