| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10870332 | FEBS Letters | 2014 | 7 Pages | 
Abstract
												Solar UV-B (280-315 nm) radiation is a developmental signal in plants but may also cause oxidative stress when combined with other environmental factors. Using computer modeling and in solution experiments we show that UV-B is capable of photosensitizing hydroxyl radical production from hydrogen peroxide. We present evidence that the oxidative effect of UV-B in leaves is at least twofold: (i) it increases cellular hydrogen peroxide concentrations, to a larger extent in pyridoxine antioxidant mutant pdx1.3-1 Arabidopsis and; (ii) is capable of a partial photo-conversion of both 'natural' and 'extra' hydrogen peroxide to hydroxyl radicals. As stress conditions other than UV can increase cellular hydrogen peroxide levels, synergistic deleterious effects of various stresses may be expected already under ambient solar UV-B.
											Keywords
												DABUV-BPSIIPAMTD-DFTtPA3,3′-diaminobenzidineDFTROSHydrogen peroxideArabidopsisTerephthalic acidLeafParoxygen radicalsHydroxyl radicalPhotosynthesisPhotosystem IIComputer modelingpulse amplitude modulationDensity functional theoryTime-dependent density functional theoryHtpAReactive oxygen speciesPlant
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											Authors
												Gyula Czégény, Min Wu, András Dér, Leif A. Eriksson, Ã
ke Strid, Ãva Hideg, 
											