Abstract

Reactive oxygen species play a crucial role for various physiological and developmental processes in plants. Here, we report a spatial pattern of oxidative stress and antioxidant defence within maize leaf. Localization of hydrogen peroxide in different region of leaf clearly exhibits well-defined increasing pattern of accumulation from the base to the leaf tip. Lipid peroxidation, an index of oxidative damage, also showed a similar pattern-like hydrogen peroxide that is lowest at the base and highest at the leaf tip. NADPH oxidase, an enzyme responsible for superoxide anion generation, showed highest activity in the leaf tip and least in the leaf base regions. Superoxide dismutase (SOD) activity was increased from the base to the leaf tip. Peroxidases, DAB-peroxidase (DAB-POD) and guaiacol-peroxidase (G-POD), catalase (CAT) and glutathione reductase (GR) also showed increases in their activities from the base to the leaf tip. Ascorbate peroxidase (APX), however, showed a reverse trend—highest at the base and least in the leaf tip. The decrease in APX and increases in the activities of other antioxidant enzymes SOD, CAT, DAB-POD, G-POD and GR along with H2O2 and lipid peroxidation, ascorbate/dehydroascorbate and non-protein thiol levels from the base to the leaf tip clearly exhibit a spatial pattern prior to the onset of visible signs of senescence in the maize leaf.

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