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Linking isoprene with plant thermotolerance, antioxidants and monoterpene emissions
Author(s) -
PEÑUELAS J.,
LLUSIÀ J.,
ASENSIO D.,
MUNNÉBOSCH S.
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
plant, cell and environment
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.646
H-Index - 200
eISSN - 1365-3040
pISSN - 0140-7791
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-3040.2004.01250.x
Subject(s) - isoprene , antioxidant , fumigation , chemistry , monoterpene , photosynthesis , terpenoid , terpene , ascorbic acid , botany , chlorophyll , horticulture , food science , biochemistry , biology , organic chemistry , copolymer , polymer
The purpose of the present study was to test the possible plant thermotolerance role of isoprene and to study its relationship with non‐enzymatic antioxidants and terpene emissions. The gas exchange, chlorophyll fluorescence, extent of photo‐ and oxidative stress, leaf damage, mechanisms of photo‐ and antioxidant protection, and terpene emission were measured in leaves of Quercus ilex seedlings exposed to a ramp of temperatures of 5 °C steps from 25 to 50 °C growing with and without isoprene (10 µ L L −1 ) fumigation. The results showed that isoprene actually conferred thermotolerance (shifted the decrease of net photosynthetic rates from 35 to 45 °C, increased F v / F m at 50 °C from 0.38 to 0.65, and decreased the leaf area damaged from 27 to 15%), that it precluded or delayed the enhancement of the antioxidant non‐enzymatic defence conferred by α ‐tocopherol, ascorbic acid or β ‐carotene consumption in response to increasing temperatures, and that it decreased by approximately 70% the emissions of monoterpenes at the highest temperatures. This suggests that there are inducible mechanisms triggered by the initial stages of thermal damage that up‐regulate these antioxidant compounds at high temperatures and that these mechanisms are somehow suppressed in the presence of exogenous isoprene, which seems to already exert an antioxidant‐like behaviour.