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Insights into Plant Programmed Cell Death Induced by Heavy Metals-Discovering a Terra Incognita

期刊

CELLS
卷 10, 期 1, 页码 -

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cells10010065

关键词

programmed cell death; necrosis; abiotic stress; heavy metal stress; cell culture; gene expression; plant PCD vs; animal PCD

资金

  1. National Science Centre [2017/27/N/NZ8/00949]

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Programmed cell death (PCD) in plants, divided into developmental and environmental types, is regulated by internal or external factors. Abiotic stress factors, like heavy metals, induce plant cell death by triggering oxidative stress, with ROS, hormones, and other signaling pathways playing crucial regulatory roles.
Programmed cell death (PCD) is a process that plays a fundamental role in plant development and responses to biotic and abiotic stresses. Knowledge of plant PCD mechanisms is still very scarce and is incomparable to the large number of studies on PCD mechanisms in animals. Quick and accurate assays, e.g., the TUNEL assay, comet assay, and analysis of caspase-like enzyme activity, enable the differentiation of PCD from necrosis. Two main types of plant PCD, developmental (dPCD) regulated by internal factors, and environmental (ePCD) induced by external stimuli, are distinguished based on the differences in the expression of the conserved PCD-inducing genes. Abiotic stress factors, including heavy metals, induce necrosis or ePCD. Heavy metals induce PCD by triggering oxidative stress via reactive oxygen species (ROS) overproduction. ROS that are mainly produced by mitochondria modulate phytotoxicity mechanisms induced by heavy metals. Complex crosstalk between ROS, hormones (ethylene), nitric oxide (NO), and calcium ions evokes PCD, with proteases with caspase-like activity executing PCD in plant cells exposed to heavy metals. This pathway leads to very similar cytological hallmarks of heavy metal induced PCD to PCD induced by other abiotic factors. The forms, hallmarks, mechanisms, and genetic regulation of plant ePCD induced by abiotic stress are reviewed here in detail, with an emphasis on plant cell culture as a suitable model for PCD studies. The similarities and differences between plant and animal PCD are also discussed.

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