Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

The roles of methyl jasmonate to stress in plants

View through CrossRef
Plants are constantly exposed to various stresses, which can degrade their health. The stresses can be alleviated by the application of methyl jasmonate (MeJA), which is a hormone involved in plant signalling. MeJA induces synthesis of defensive compounds and initiates the expression of pathogenesis-related genes involved in systemic acquired resistance and local resistance. Thus, MeJA may be used against pathogens, salt stress, drought stress, low temperature, heavy metal stress and toxicities of other elements. The application of MeJA improves growth, induces the accumulation of active compounds, and affects endogenous hormones levels, and other physiological and biochemical characteristics in stressed plants. Furthermore, MeJA antagonises the adverse effects of osmotic stress by regulating inorganic penetrating ions or organic penetrants to suppress the absorption of toxic ions. MeJA also mitigates oxidative stress by activating antioxidant systems to scavenge reactive oxygen species (ROS) in stressed plants. For these reasons, we reviewed the use of exogenous MeJA in alleviating biotic (pathogens and insects) and abiotic stresses in plants.
Title: The roles of methyl jasmonate to stress in plants
Description:
Plants are constantly exposed to various stresses, which can degrade their health.
The stresses can be alleviated by the application of methyl jasmonate (MeJA), which is a hormone involved in plant signalling.
MeJA induces synthesis of defensive compounds and initiates the expression of pathogenesis-related genes involved in systemic acquired resistance and local resistance.
Thus, MeJA may be used against pathogens, salt stress, drought stress, low temperature, heavy metal stress and toxicities of other elements.
The application of MeJA improves growth, induces the accumulation of active compounds, and affects endogenous hormones levels, and other physiological and biochemical characteristics in stressed plants.
Furthermore, MeJA antagonises the adverse effects of osmotic stress by regulating inorganic penetrating ions or organic penetrants to suppress the absorption of toxic ions.
MeJA also mitigates oxidative stress by activating antioxidant systems to scavenge reactive oxygen species (ROS) in stressed plants.
For these reasons, we reviewed the use of exogenous MeJA in alleviating biotic (pathogens and insects) and abiotic stresses in plants.

Related Results

All That JAZ
All That JAZ
The intoxicating scent of jasmine depends in part on jasmonates, fatty acid-derived hormones implicated in plant defense and development. Jasmonate signaling in plants depends on C...
Jasmonate signaling coordinates with the SOD7–KLU pathway to regulate seed size in Arabidopsis thaliana
Jasmonate signaling coordinates with the SOD7–KLU pathway to regulate seed size in Arabidopsis thaliana
Abstract Seed size is crucial for crop yield and plant ecological fitness. The phytohormone jasmonate regulates Arabidopsis thaliana seed size, but the underlying mo...
Factors Affecting the Production of Poly Methyl Galacturonase Enzyme by Sclerotium rolfsii Sacc
Factors Affecting the Production of Poly Methyl Galacturonase Enzyme by Sclerotium rolfsii Sacc
The aim of this work was to investigate the effects of different culture conditions on the production of poly methyl galacturonase enzyme bySclerotium rolfsii and their optimizatio...
The Jasmonate Pathway
The Jasmonate Pathway
Plants are faced with many of the same problems as animals—a need for regulation of metabolic processes and reproduction and for defense against enemies. Jasmonates in plants serve...
Methyl jasmonate represses translation initiation of a specific set of mRNAs in barley
Methyl jasmonate represses translation initiation of a specific set of mRNAs in barley
Jasmonic acid methyl ester (methyl jasmonate, JaMe) causes accumulation of novel abundant proteins in excised leaf segments of barley, and concomitantly represses synthesis of most...

Back to Top