Publications by authors named "Anne-Antonella Serra"

Article Synopsis
  • Soil pollution from man-made chemicals threatens crop production and biodiversity, requiring a comprehensive understanding of its effects.
  • Studies of pesticide dynamics in vegetative filter strips in northern Brittany indicated they can reduce pesticide levels between fields and rivers, but contamination remains complex and persistent.
  • Over two years, plant communities in these filter strips changed rapidly, with specific species becoming dominant, revealing a correlation between plant dynamics and the presence of residual pesticides.
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Soil pollution by anthropogenic chemicals is a major concern for sustainability of crop production and of ecosystem functions mediated by natural plant biodiversity. The complex effects on plants are however difficult to apprehend. Plant communities of field margins, vegetative filter strips or rotational fallows are confronted with agricultural pollutants through residual soil contamination and/or through drift, run-off and leaching events that result from chemical applications.

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Herbicide impact is usually assessed as the result of a unilinear mode of action on a specific biochemical target with a typical dose-response dynamics. Recent developments in plant molecular signaling and crosstalk between nutritional, hormonal and environmental stress cues are however revealing a more complex picture of inclusive toxicity. Herbicides induce large-scale metabolic and gene-expression effects that go far beyond the expected consequences of unilinear herbicide-target-damage mechanisms.

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Article Synopsis
  • Lolium perenne is a key species in various ecosystems and can be affected by chemical pollutants in the soil, which may lead to adjustments in its metabolism.
  • A study using transcriptome analysis revealed that low levels of pollutants like glyphosate and tebuconazole influence critical gene expressions related to growth and stress responses, even without causing visible damage to the plants.
  • Findings indicate that even sub-toxic levels of pesticides can disrupt cellular signaling and metabolic processes, highlighting the intricate relationships between molecular responses, carbohydrate dynamics, and hormonal signaling in plants.
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Article Synopsis
  • Plant communities face various chemical stresses, and research has mostly focused on specific stressors under acute exposure rather than multiple stressors under realistic subtoxic conditions.
  • The C3 grass Lolium perenne was studied to understand how different chemical stressors like pesticides and heavy metals affect plant physiology, showing that these stressors cause distinct physiological changes and complex metabolic shifts.
  • The findings reveal that these chemical stresses impact nitrogen metabolism and photorespiration, indicating a connection between specific stressor effects and broader metabolic adjustments, which might involve changes in soluble sugars and how plants sense energy levels.
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Anthropic changes and chemical pollution confront wild plant communities with xenobiotic combinations of bioactive molecules, degradation products, and adjuvants that constitute chemical challenges potentially affecting plant growth and fitness. Such complex challenges involving residual contamination and mixtures of pollutants are difficult to assess. The model plant Arabidopsis thaliana was confronted by combinations consisting of the herbicide glyphosate, the fungicide tebuconazole, the glyphosate degradation product aminomethylphosphonic acid (AMPA), and the atrazine degradation product hydroxyatrazine, which had been detected and quantified in soils of field margins in an agriculturally intensive region.

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Higher plants are exposed to natural environmental organic chemicals, associated with plant-environment interactions, and xenobiotic environmental organic chemicals, associated with anthropogenic activities. The effects of these chemicals result not only from interaction with metabolic targets, but also from interaction with the complex regulatory networks of hormone signaling. Purpose-designed plant hormone analogues thus show extensive signaling effects on gene regulation and are as such important for understanding plant hormone mechanisms and for manipulating plant growth and development.

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Anthropogenic changes and chemical pollution confront plant communities with various xenobiotic compounds or combinations of xenobiotics, involving chemical structures that are at least partially novel for plant species. Plant responses to chemical challenges and stimuli are usually characterized by the approaches of toxicology, ecotoxicology, and stress physiology. Development of transcriptomics and proteomics analysis has demonstrated the importance of modifications to gene expression in plant responses to xenobiotics.

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