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Isoprene: An Antioxidant Itself or a Molecule with Multiple Regulatory Functions in Plants?

Journal

ANTIOXIDANTS
Volume 10, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/antiox10050684

Keywords

isoprenoids; reactive oxygen species (ROS); defense priming; signaling; hormones; volatile organic compounds (VOCs)

Funding

  1. project of particular relevance Italy-South Korea (Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs)
  2. Project PRIN-COFIN 2018 (Italian Ministry of University and Research)

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Isoprene is a small, volatile organic compound synthesized in plants through photosynthesis, with potential protective roles but controversial antioxidant properties.
Isoprene (C5H8) is a small lipophilic, volatile organic compound (VOC), synthesized in chloroplasts of plants through the photosynthesis-dependent 2-C-methyl-D-erythritol 4-phosphate (MEP) pathway. Isoprene-emitting plants are better protected against thermal and oxidative stresses but only about 20% of the terrestrial plants are able to synthesize isoprene. Many studies have been performed to understand the still elusive isoprene protective mechanism. Isoprene reacts with, and quenches, many harmful reactive oxygen species (ROS) like singlet oxygen (O-1(2)). A role for isoprene as antioxidant, made possible by its reduced state and conjugated double bonds, has been often suggested, and sometimes demonstrated. However, as isoprene is present at very low concentrations compared to other molecules, its antioxidant role is still controversial. Here we review updated evidences on the function(s) of isoprene, and outline contrasting indications on whether isoprene is an antioxidant directly scavenging ROS, or a membrane strengthener, or a modulator of genomic, proteomic and metabolomic profiles (perhaps as a secondary effect of ROS removal) eventually leading to priming of antioxidant plant defenses, or a signal of stress for neighbor plants alike other VOCs, or a hormone-like molecule, controlling the metabolic flux of other hormones made by the MEP pathway, or acting itself as a growth and development hormone.

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