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      Early production and scavenging of hydrogen peroxide in the apoplast of sunflower plants exposed to ozone.

      Journal of Experimental Botany
      Cell Membrane, enzymology, Free Radical Scavengers, metabolism, Fumigation, Helianthus, drug effects, physiology, Hydrogen Peroxide, Kinetics, NAD(P)H Dehydrogenase (Quinone), NADH, NADPH Oxidoreductases, NADPH Oxidase, Ozone, pharmacology, Plant Structures, Thiobarbituric Acid Reactive Substances, analysis, Time Factors

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          Abstract

          The present work set out to define the processes involved in the early O3-induced H2O2 accumulation in sunflower plants exposed to a single pulse of 150 ppb of O3 for 4 h. Hydrogen peroxide accumulation only occurred in the apoplast and this temporally coincided with the fumigation period. The inhibitor experiments suggested that both the plasma membrane-bound NAD(P)H oxidase complex and cell-wall NAD(P)H PODs contributed to H2O2 generation. To investigate the mechanisms responsible for O3-induced H2O2 accumulation further, both production and scavenging of H2O2 were investigated in the extracellular matrix after subcellular fractionation. The results indicated that H2O2 accumulation is a complex and highly regulated event requiring the time-dependent stimulation and down-regulation of differently located enzymes, some of which are involved in H2O2 generation and degradation, not only during the fumigation period but also in the subsequent recovery period in non-polluted air. Owing to the possible interplay between H2O2 and ethylene, the time-course of ethylene emission was analysed too. Ethylene was rapidly emitted following O3 exposure, but it declined to control values as early as after 4 h of exposure. The early contemporaneous detection of increased ethylene and H2O2 levels after 30 min of exposure does not allow a clear temporal relationship between these two signalling molecules to be established.

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