Regulation of plants metabolism in response to salt stress: an omics approach

In recent era, some man-made and natural activities are responsible for causing salt stress that affects each component of environment. Among several components, plant is one of the essential components, and with the consequence of excess salts accumulation in the environment their metabolic activit...

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Veröffentlicht in:Acta physiologiae plantarum 2017-02, Vol.39 (2), p.1-17, Article 48
Hauptverfasser: Singh, Madhulika, Singh, Anita, Prasad, Sheo Mohan, Singh, Rajiv Kumar
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container_title Acta physiologiae plantarum
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creator Singh, Madhulika
Singh, Anita
Prasad, Sheo Mohan
Singh, Rajiv Kumar
description In recent era, some man-made and natural activities are responsible for causing salt stress that affects each component of environment. Among several components, plant is one of the essential components, and with the consequence of excess salts accumulation in the environment their metabolic activities may get affected. Plants exhibit hyper-osmotic stress and ion disturbance in the presence of excess salt accumulation. To combat this stress situation, some metabolites/or stress-responsive gene(s) and proteins are synthesized by the plants to mitigate the salt toxicity. Therefore, to reduce the impact of salt stress on yield and other physiological activities of plants it is essential to know the whole pathway through which plant’s metabolism get affected in the presence of salt. The present review is also dealing with the same objective and special focus is given to the omics tools, such as genomics, proteomics and metabolomics to discuss the different ways of tolerance mechanism in the plant system against salt toxicity.
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subjects Abiotic stress
Accumulation
Agriculture
Biomedical and Life Sciences
Life Sciences
Metabolism
Metabolites
Metabolomics
Osmotic stress
Plant Anatomy/Development
Plant Biochemistry
Plant Genetics and Genomics
Plant Pathology
Plant Physiology
Proteins
Proteomics
Review
Salt
Salts
Stress
Stresses
Toxicity
title Regulation of plants metabolism in response to salt stress: an omics approach
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